Upload
others
View
0
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Page | 2
Submitted to the School of Architecture and Planning the Faculty of Engineering and the
Built Environment at the University of The Witwatersrand Johannesburg in partial fulfilment of
a Bachelor of Science Honours degree in Urban and Regional Planning
The financial assistance of the National Research Foundation (NRF) and the Womenrsquos
Property Network (WPN) is hereby acknowledged The views expressed in this report are
those of the author and are not necessarily those of the NRF or the WPN
Johannesburg 2015
Page | 3
In submitting this research report I (Shereen Tumelo Moloto) declare that the
contents contained in this report unless otherwise indicated in the text are my own
unaided work
This report is submitted to the School of Architecture and Planning in partial fulfilment
of a Bachelor of Science Honours degree in Urban and Regional Planning The contents
of this report have not been submitted before to any other institutionuniversity or for
any other degreequalification
(Signature of candidate)
day of year
Page | 4
To everyone that contributed to this study I am truly grateful
To the two women closest and dearest to my heart my mom and grandmother you
have both been such a blessing and your zealous attitudes and support have been
invaluable le mohau wa modimo To my family my dad my aunt my brother Kwena
and cousins Koena Mohau le Phuti your support through this time kept me positive
and encouraged I love you all and thank you Thank you to all my friends more
especially to Ayanda for your love and support always
I would like to acknowledge the financial contributions of the Womenrsquos Property
Network (WPN) and the National Research Foundation (NRF) to Nicky Chetty from
WPN your optimism and gusto was always so refreshing Thank you
I am also grateful to the following people
My supervisor Dr Sarah Charlton the inputs that you gave and the contribution that
you made towards developing this study were truly invaluable and much
appreciated To Jabu Mthethwa Malibongwe Dyiki Simba Bako Cllr Mohlapamaswi
Sisa Majikijela Lufefe Sololo Vincent Shibambo Musa Ndaba and Mmagang
Modisha Thank you all for taking the time to share your thoughts and perspectives
Thank you to Nelson and Rosie for the hopefulness and wisdom you relentlessly
provided To Nqobile Malaza you model astuteness and diligence thank you for
being such a wonderful exemplar of potency and valour To Riaan Engelbercht I am
grateful for your editorial inputs
Page | 5
To think too long about doing a
thing often becomes its undoing ndash
Eva young
Page | 6
This study emanates as a result of two main contributing factors the first being
somewhat retrospective and the second being of academic interest and
inquisitiveness Both will hopefully contribute to a study that will make a meaningful
contribution to broader scholarly literature and learning
I grew up living fairly close to a hostel I had walked past this particular hostel
(Sethokga) on numerous occasions in fact more times than I can recall but I had
never set foot in a hostel until quite recently It was not because I was told not to go
into the hostel or cautioned not to mingle with those residing in the hostel but there
was always this strange feeling of unease and uncertainty that presented itself in the
lofty dim grungy facade of this place There was in myself however I curiousness
about the hostel not just because of how it looked that is the extensive and obvious
outward appearance of wear and tear but the ingenuous wondering of how this
place functioned Who lived there how did they live there and so I rather naively
wondered why anyone would chose to live lsquoin that placersquo What was also always
curious was how the hostel seemed to be remote from the township which
surrounded it
Some ten years later after many years that this hostel had been out of sight and for
the most part out of mind I was in the neighbourhood and noticed these more
appealing apartment-like structures that appeared to be replacing the old structures
and with a great deal of inquisitiveness and some courage I set to inquire on this The
abstract below confers some of my own sentiments that of the few published studies
on hostels most of the focus has been on hostels in Johannesburg and Cape Town
(Dyiki interview 2015) Hence the fact that the case study for this study was situated
in an area that is quite literally and somewhat figuratively lsquoclose to homersquo provided
personal eagerness and allure about this study and an opportunity to confront this
oversight
ldquo by an accident of research the hostels in Cape Town have been under a far
more intense sociological gaze than those on the East Rand Given the sudden
prominence of the inner city hostels in the Transvaal war we have been forced to
recognise and attempt to overcome this oversight of the few published studies
on the hostels in the Transvaal most focus on Johannesburg and are essentially
descriptiverdquo (Segal 19915)
Page | 7
While I have always been curious about where and how people live and their
experiences and reality in the places they reside hostels have always intrigued me
This particular focus on hostels also emanates as a result of a particular frustration
within my standing as a scholar with what has continually appeared to me that is to
be this sort of overstretched overemphasis and preoccupation by our post-1994
government with shanty towns This is not to say that I think shanty towns are not a
significant area of concern characterised by some of the worst living conditions and
rightfully so deserve concerted attention and decisive remedial measures According
to Segal (1991) much like hostel dwellers the residents of shantyrsquos form part of the
South African populace who have been amongst the most severely exploited and
disadvantaged (Segal 1991)
In focusing on hostels as a euphemism for single-sex labour compounds one is
confronted with a similarly momentous and multifaceted circumstance As hostels
were and largely still continue to be very much part of the housing crisis in the country
and so this research report will endeavour to cast some light on hostels to
contextualise hostels the hostel conversion approach and the associated stigma of
hostel live within a contemporary South African context
Page | 8
Chapter one Introductory chapter15
1 Introduction15
11 Background to the study17
12 Rationale18
13 Problem statement18
14 Research question and sub-questions19
15 Significance of the study19
16 Aim and objectives of the research20
17 Research methodology20
171 Type of research20
172 What kind of information is needed22
173 Collecting data22
174 Sampling22
175 Ethical considerations23
18 Conclusion24
Chapter two Theoretical backdrop25
2 Introduction25
21 Contextualising hostels26
22 Key concepts theories ideas and arguments27
221 The historic model of hostels the conceptualisation of the hostel system28
222 Migration and the notion of migrant labour labourers as conceived under the
hostel system29
223 The notion of bedhold31
Page | 9
224 The stigma of hostel life31
225 Family versus household configurations32
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing33
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy35
228The role and significance of communitypublic participation in hostel conversion
projects35
23 Conclusion38
Chapter three Introducing Sethokga hostel39
3 Introduction39
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)39
311 Geographic description of the study area41
312 Locality44
313 Local and municipal context45
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel50
321 Built formArchitecture50
322 Municipal services54
323 The adjoining area55
33 Conclusion56
Chapter four The states approach to hostel conversion58
4 Introduction58
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach58
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach59
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme59
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process60
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing61
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised
Housing61
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country62
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme63
44 The Community Residential Units Programme65
45 Conclusion67
Chapter five The Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project68
5 Introduction68
Page | 10
51 Outline of the main components of the project68
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project68
512 Project phases69
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project70
521 Broad vision and aim of the project74
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and
in turn set to address those needs and challenges76
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project77
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful78
53 Visual narrative of the site of the family units79
531Architectural designsplans79
532 The project site of the family units82
533 Inside the family units84
53 Summary of main themes and findings86
54 Conclusion88
Chapter six Concluding chapter89
61 Review and reflections89
62 Limitations of the study91
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners91
64 Conclusion92
List of references94
Page | 11
Pages
Maps
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni
hostel and Vusimuzi hostel40
Map 2 Locality map44
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex45
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework48
Figures
Figure 1 Ground floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 2 First floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 3 Elevation of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 4 Collage of exterior imagery of the hostel50
Figure 5 Collage of interior imagery of the hostel52
Figure 6 Municipal amenities54
Figure 7 The adjoining area55
Figure 8 Community meeting agenda74
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga developmenthelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip76
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development planhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip79
Figure 11 Architects Section F-Fhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figue 12 Architects Section E-Ehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figure 13 South Elevation80
Figure 14 North Elevatonhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip81
Figure 15 East Elevation81
Figure 16 West Elevation81
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site82
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units84
Table
Table 1 Total workforce in the period December 2013 - January 2014 Sethokga
sitehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip72
Page | 12
ANC African National Congress
Cllr Councillor
CRU Community Residential Units
DoHS Department of Human Settlements
EMM Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
GPDHS Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement
HRP Hostel Redevelopment Programme
IDP Integrated Development Plan
IFP Inkatha Freedom Party
MSDF Metropolitan Spatial Development Framework
PWV Pretoria ndash Witwatersrand ndash Vereeniging
RDP Reconstruction and Development Programme
SDF Spatial Development Framework
USAID United States Agency for International Development
USN Urban Sector Network
Page | 13
Chapter one will essentially introduce the research report The aim of this chapter is as
follows highlight the objective of the study provide a background to the study and
also discuss the rationale and problem statement In addition to detailing the
research question the significance of this study and the research methodology will
also be reviewed
Coincidently this research report is written and takes place at a time where there has
been somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms With the prevailing question being ldquoWhat iscontinues to be the
role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo Although this study will not in effect
actively seek to answer that particular question it presents a valuable premise for this
study ldquoFamily units to address the stigma of hostel liferdquo
The main aim of this chapter is to contextualise hostel to position the study within an
expanded theoretical framework The main chapter will in part argue that hostels
have largely remained as urban enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric and
that the rigid structures of regulation and control which were imposed on hostel
dwellers have perpetuated a complex state of affairs The literature review section
which details some of the key concepts theories ideas and arguments on the topic
will elaborate further on this
This chapter aims to provide a comprehensive description of the study area and so it
is in this chapter that the local as well as municipal context of the study area will
altogether be considered The aim of this chapter is to provide the reader with a sort
of lsquofeelrsquo of Sethokga hostel and its present-day circumstance It will attempt to
articulate to the reader the authors own experience and account of the study area
Page | 14
in an effort to provide the reader with a well-versed narrative of the multifaceted
nature of the hostel and the complex reality in which its residents endure
The South African statersquos approach to hostel redevelopment conversion is
discussed It is argued that the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of hostel
redevelopment conversion Chapter four discusses a number of state policy and
approaches addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo Ahead of this however the evolution of the
hostel redevelopment conversion approach is examined which dates back to the
earliest (soon after 1994) efforts by the South African government to remedy the ills of
the hostel system
Chapter five examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seeks to unpack
the conceptualisation of the project This chapter reflects and draws extensively on
the findings of the field work and the invaluable insights offered by the key informants
The main components of the hostel conversion project are examined and the vision
of Sethokga personified by the hostel conversion project is presented in chapter five
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoSo what does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
Page | 15
Introductory chapter
In the wake of the political transition in South Africa in 1994 and for some time
preceding this time frame violence squalor overcrowding and socio-political strife
had long become characteristic of some of the features associated with hostels and
the stigma of hostel life (Thurman 1997) Due to its history as systematically
disempowered yet politically vocal enclaves we have come to know or perhaps be
familiar with hostels as highly contentious and antagonistic environments with a
burdened local identity (Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The stigma of hostel life constitutes among a host of conditions an innate reality
where the residents of hostels inhibit isolated destitute and unbecoming spaces
(Segal 1991) Built as single-sex labour compounds to accommodate African migrant
labourers for the duration of their stay in South Africarsquos white urban areas hostels
occupy a unique position within the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape
(Thurman 1997) As sojourners in South Africarsquos white urban areas the law
constructed a lsquolegalrsquo person called a labourer who was lsquoauthorisedrsquo to temporarily
reside in the urban space but had to retreat to their rural quarters once their lsquoservicersquo
had been concluded (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Thus to draw attention to the
unkindness of their living conditions many hostel dwellers have continued for the
better part of South Africarsquos democracy to lsquochoosersquo physical violence as a tool
perceived to best serve and afford some attention to their troubles (Pienaar and
Crofton 2005)
Within the context of this research report the term hostels widely refer to single-sex
dormitory style labour compounds which emerged in South Africa under the
apartheid system and ideology of separate development (Pienaar and Crofton
2005) The ideology of separate development and the resultant influx control policies
were a distinctive trait of the government of a particular juncture in the countryrsquos
history - a government that as part of its mandate held to discourage the permanent
settlement of the African populace in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) This further
translated itself in the governmentrsquos refusal to plan and consent to any sort of
lsquomeaningfulrsquo investment into areas designated for the other who were primarily
located in the townships on the periphery of the urban terrain (Ramphele 1993)
Page | 16
Badly designed poorly built and suffering many years of neglect hostels were
primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for the comfort of hostel
dwellers (Thurman 1997) Conceivably the hostel system socialised its inhabitants into
an undignified and callous condition which has in some respect persisted and has
unfortunately not wholly been reconciled (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In hostels that
were male occupied hostel dwellers were regarded as lsquomen of four worldsrsquo which
referred to their present and existing life within the hostel the surrounding township(s)
places of work and their rural homes (Segal 1991) The hostel system made it
impossible for hostel dwellers to live in the hostel with their families ie wives
husbands partners children (Segal 1991) This consequence is particularly important
to note at this early stage in the report because of the wisdom and context it adds as
the study progresses
Coincidently this research is written and takes place at a time where there has been
somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms Undoubtedly the prevailing question has been ldquoWhat is should be
the role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo The current Minister of Human
Settlements has said that ldquohostels no longer have a place within South Africarsquos
democratically reconfigured state and so the state needs to get rid of hostelsrdquo (Sisulu
2015) However in a nation such as South Africa efforts towards transition are
ambiguous complex and can often be marked by violence (Mosoetsa 2011)
According to Thurman (1997) of an estimated 604 000 hostel beds around the country
in the late 1990s accommodated whole families relatively close to urban centres
Furthermore Thurman argues that hostels present both a significant challenge and an
opportunity for government NGOs developers and hostel dwellers themselves High
density housing stock stood to gain a considerably large supply of low income
(Thurman 1997) Even while a large number of hostel redevelopmentconversion
projects continue to be riddled with tension and difficulty the prospect(s) for change
and reform that they offer cannot simply be dismissed
This study seeks to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel conversion project to
develop an informed understanding of the defining features and characteristics of
this particular hostel conversion project It examines what is and what has been the
nature of engagement and dialogue between the various stakeholders involved and
discusses the insights they were able to offer to this study In 2015 21 years into South
Page | 17
Africarsquos democracy we have to wonder what is needed to make amends and offset
the dishonour of hostel life
11 Background to the study
We have to understand what the hostel system did was to lsquoaccommodatersquo the
African populace in single-sex labour compounds (Segal 1991) Upon their arrival
their presence in urban areas was constrained as they were met with strict rules and
restrictions (Ramphele 1993) In turn social relations were severally volatile and
ambiguous under the hostel system as hostel dwellers were constrained in their ability
to interact in certain or in their own chosen ways (Thurman 1997) There have been a
number of authors who have noted that the notion of family was partly if not entirely
redefined under this system (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were designed with little or no
thought given of human comfort security and interaction and many are still in
appalling neglected and overcrowded conditions (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) For
many people hostels represent a bitter and hopeless reminder of the past while for
others they are a well prized and affordable shelter in an environment of serve
homelessness (Thurman 1997)
Accordingly soon after 1994 South Africarsquos democratic government made some
attempt to convert hostels into environments suitable for family life although the
extent of this has not entirely been clear (DoHS 2015) This was met with hostility
violence and unwillingness by some hostel dwellers particularly those in the Pretoria
Witwatersrand and Vereeniging (PWV) region to have their hostels
convertedredeveloped into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010) The
violence that had become synonymous with hostel life became an overwhelming
impediment that proved difficult to overcome (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that the idea of an unambiguous constant and unrestricted
presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a point of contention for
some of the men who had far too long become accustomed to living lsquoalonersquo as
men Some expressed unwillingness while others found it a struggle to comprehend or
endorse this change that seemed far too unfamiliar and a challenge to come to
grips with (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Thus in hostels where hostel conversion projects have since taken-off the general
attitudes perceptions and reception of the projects have in some respects continued
to be negative and unwelcomed Scepticism tension and hostility add to the already
complex nature of the hostel conversion projects (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
Page | 18
2010) Hostels are still largely spaces confronted with deep social injustices (ie poor
living conditions a lack of privacy overcrowded) and are an insult to the dignity of
their occupants in several ways as both spatially limited and socio-economically
limiting spaces (Ramphele 1993) The limits imposed by hostels onto hostel dwellers
have persisted in protracting unkindness and a distorted conception of the
fundamental purpose of housing Hostels remain as an unfortunate symbol of a
former governmentrsquos refusal and failure to acknowledge the personhood (the
position and quality of being an individual or having feelings perspectives integrity
and human characteristics needs and wants) of the men and women they housed
(Ramphele 1993)
12 Rationale
Arguably hostel conversion projects and particularly the conceptualisation of these
projects is still a relatively under-researched field Based on my efforts to find
published work on the subject and even though there have been a number of
hostels across the country which have undergone or are undergoing hostel
conversion this remains a rather neglected study field
Hostels within their historic make-up were for the most part premised on fairly uniform
ideals arrangements and gender configurations The demographic setting within
some hostels across the country have since become a lot more fluid and departed
from their former mandatory construct (as strictly single-sex spaces) In what were
predominantly male occupied hostels women and children have since moved into
some of those hostels
Sethokga hostel which will serve as the case study for this research is a hostel that is
still predominantly male occupied but is undergoing hostel conversion to convert the
hostel into family units I believe that the fact that the hostel is still predominantly
male occupied presents an intriguing dimension to this study on hostel conversion
and efforts to grapple with the research question
13 Problem statement
In the case of Sethokga hostel a hostel conversion project is underway but it is not
clear what has sparked such a conversion and to what extent it is driven by the
available policies or assessments of needs or what attempt has been made to meet
these needs Subsequently what would the conversion of a predominantly male
Page | 19
dominated hostel rife with historically inherent conditions necessitate Therefore
how has the conversion project grasped the experience of men within such a hostel
and how has it grasped the concept of family life
14 Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units been conceptualised and
based upon the conceptualised ideas does it address the stigma of hostel life and it
what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What led to the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail What is the broad aim and vision
of the project What is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
15 The significance of the study - positioning the study relative to existing academic
literature
The significance of this research report lies in what I believe is a gap in the scope of
work covered over the years on hostels particularly on hostel conversion projects
Based on my efforts to find published work on the subject questions around what
these projects entail their implications relevance and impact remain unanswered
In the work I have managed to access so far this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects has somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore there needs to be more inquiry and study
conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel conversion
projects
As documented by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) there are vast and intricate
layers of engagement communication participation and even discontentment
Page | 20
involved in hostel conversion projects For instance the legitimacy around where
decision-making lies and which avenues are or should be available to voice
concerns have been some of the challenges relating to hostel conversion and have
added to the already complex nature of these projects
There is most certainly room for a study to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel
conversion project and probe this idea that family units could serve as an adequate
tool for the apt reform of hostels as many of us have come to know them associate
with them or even disassociate from them
16 Aim and objectives of the research
The main aim of this research report is to examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project and how the project has been conceptualised
Objectives
To examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
To develop a more comprehensive understanding of the hostel conversion
approach relative to the socio-economic and political context of the hostel
To explore the possibility and potential of family units as a viable tool to
addressing the stigma of hostel life
To examine how the project has understood the needs and challenges of the
residents and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
To examine the specific spatial focus of the project
17 Research methodology
171 Type of research
The methodology used in the study is a qualitative approach to research and semi-
structured interviews were conducted as the primary means of data collection
Additionally the data collection process involved the use of a variety of sources
which ranged from books journal articles newspaper articles and online media
platforms in the form of articles and radio podcasts
Page | 21
According to Cresswell (2009) this particular method to research (a qualitative
method) entails among other things the use of horizontal dialogue conversation and
the exchange of ideas between the interviewer and the interviewees (Cresswell
2009) Key informants were identified on the basis of their knowledge of andor
involvement in the Sethokga hostel conversion project and the following individuals
were interviewed
1st interviewee Mr Vincent Shibambo resident engineer with LTE consulting (the
company facilitating the construction and administration of the project) Interview
conducted 14th August 2015 at the project site The interview took place in the
boardroom of the project site offices
2nd interviewee Mr Jabu Mthethwa housing officer from the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality Interview conducted 17th August 2015 the interview took place in Mr
Mthethwarsquos office at the council offices in the Kempton Park CBD area
3rd interviewee ANC Ward 4 Tembisa Ward Councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi Interview
conducted 18th August 2015 in the ward councillorrsquos office at the ward councillors
chambers situated adjacent to the project site offices within the vicinity of the hostel
4th interviewee Mr Lufefe Sololo Ward 4 Tembisa Economic Development Rep (Mr
Sololo sits on the ward committee that advises the ward councillor) Interview
conducted 18th of August 2015 at Sethokga hostel
5th interviewee Mr Sisa Majikijela official from the Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlements Mr Majikijela is the current project manager of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project Interview conducted 19th of August 2015 in the boardroom
of the project site offices
6th interviewee Mr Malibongwe Dyiki who was a resident of a hostel in Cape Town in
the early 1980s He then became a community representative in later years and then
moved on to be a government official facilitating hostel redevelopments in the
Western Cape He has written and published on hostels and has also participated in
policy discussions on the Hostel Redevelopment Programme Interview was done on
the 7th of September 2015 at the Housing Development Agencyrsquos head office in
Killarney Johannesburg where he is currently working as the Programme Manager for
the mining towns programme
7th interviewee Simba Bako architect with Liefa Architects (appointed by LTE
consulting Liefa Architects were responsible for the design of the family units)
Page | 22
Interview conducted on the 9th of September 2015 at LTE House in Sunninghill
Johannesburg
172 What kind of information is needed
The kind of information that was needed was information which contextualised the
study area within its broader local and municipal context Pre-existing data
particularly demographic and statistical data on the hostel and its surroundings
Ekurhulenirsquos Integrated Development Plan the Metrorsquos Spatial Development
Framework and information that would give an overview of the geographic social
economic and possibly even the political context of the study area is needed
Moreover project reports studies memorandums or minutes and state policy on
hostel conversion would also be useful
173 Collecting data
In collecting data there were a number of methods and tools that were used which
involved moments of ad hoc discussion and deliberation around the topic What was
invigorating and always thrilling was peoplersquos interest and curiosity regarding this
study The impromptu encounter(s) with people who were open and ready to share
their point of views and experience(s) honestly made the data collection process
that much easier
There was a considerable amount of time spent on examining literature books
articles (both academic and media sources) sources on the internet and journals
Collecting data also involved examining similar programmes and projects on hostel
conversionredevelopment so collecting desktop data and consulting library sources
was an invaluable part of collecting data
174 Sampling
The study sample is important for any research The choice between qualitative
quantitative or even the consideration of using a mixed methods approach should
be determined by the research question and not decided subjectively In grappling
with the research question it seemed most appropriate for the purpose of this study to
make use of a qualitative approach It was believed that a qualitative approach
Page | 23
would provide the necessary framework to respond to the research question and
address the aim and objectives of the study In answering the lsquohowrsquo and lsquowhyrsquo
questions that the study would pose a qualitative approach would engage in a sort
of comprehensive exploration of the many-sided and possibly complex dynamics of
the Sethokga hostel conversion project For this reason a qualitative interview-
centred approach was used (Marshall 1996)
Marshall (1996) argues that there are three broad methods commonly used in
selecting a study sample that is convenience judgement and theoretical sampling
techniques Convenience sampling involves the most accessible person(s) it is the
least time consuming requires the least effort and financing Judgement sampling
also referred to as purposeful sampling is according to Marshall (1996) the most
widely used sampling technique With judgement sampling the researcher
purposefully and actively selects a sample that would best respond to their research
question and in principle convenience is set aside While theoretical sampling
involves a process of selection of a sample that is mainly driven by and rooted in a
theoretical position the sample is selected to examine or elaborate a particular
theory (Marshall 1996)
For the purpose of this study the judgemental sampling technique was used and this
entailed the active and purposeful selection of what Marshall refers to as lsquosubjectsrsquo
with particular expertise ie key informants The sample selection was based on my
prior experience and practical knowledge of the study area The limitation however
was that there were quite a number of elaborate and contentious issues at play
which within the limits of this study could not be explored at length on account of
time constraints and the particular focus of this study
175 Ethical considerations
As a young female scholar entering into a rather conflicted lsquotoughrsquo and culturally-
laden environment I was faced with what was an apparent concern for safety and
so on my trips to the hostel I was always accompanied by my father or a friend
Initially my intention was to interview some of the hostel residents but the sensitivities
around the harshness of their living conditions were highlighted as a possible area of
vulnerability and the spate of xenophobia attacks particularly in and around hostels
suggested reconsideration As a researcher I ensured that the participants were all
Page | 24
well aware and informed that their participation was voluntary and they were at
liberty to withdraw their involvement at any stage The interviewees were informed of
the choice to remain anonymous if they wished and that the information they shared
would be used to develop this research report Thus my ethical obligation as a
researcher was to ensure that I did minimal harm and unintentional damage through
my research that I conducted myself responsibly and professionally at all times and
that I reported accurately what I found including unforeseen and even negative
findings
18 Conclusion
Hostels consolidated the migrant labour system They served not only to control the
number of black labour residing in urban areas but also to manage its behaviour As
hostels were designed to be unattractive and uncomfortable many comparisons
have been made between hostels and institutions such as army barracks and prisons
There is a window of opportunity in promoting hostel conversion but injecting
resources into previously marginalised communities have resulted and is resulting in
conflict local power struggles and competition for those resources (Thurman 1997)
The next chapter will discuss the theoretical backdrop of this study and elaborate on
key concepts theories ideas and arguments that have been of particular relevance
to unpacking the research question
Page | 25
Theoretical backdrop
2 Introduction
It is imperative at this point to contextualise the term hostels so as to clearly il lustrate
what is meant by it This section of the report will contextualise the term hostels and it
will examine key concepts theories ideas and arguments that are of particular
relevance to the study
Furthermore chapter two argues that hostels have largely remained as urban
enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
It argues that the rigid structures of regulation and control that were imposed upon
the former inhabitants of hostels were essentially just one part of a multi-faceted and
disconcerting circumstance that has continued to live on within a large number of
hostels (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012) This view that hostels operated and in some
respect continue to operate under a complex set of circumstances is shared and
supported by the work of authors such as Segal (1991) Ramphele (1993) Goldblatt
and Meintjes(1996) Thurman (1997) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) Dyiki (2006) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) Subsequently some of their work will be used to
unpack the research question and draw on certain aspects that resonate with the
case study The following abridged abstract describes some of the complexities
around hostels and the views captured in the work of some of the authors mentioned
above
According to Segal (1991) hostel life and the regulations imposed upon hostel
dwellers made it extremely difficult to maintain family life that is men would leave
their families in the rural areas for long periods of time to find work in the city
Ramphele (1993) notes that the families of the men would then became reliant for
their survival upon the remittance of the men Mapetla (2005) makes a compelling
argument that suggests that within contemporary society men are traditionally
culturally and even spiritually still regarded as the head the protector and provider of
their families even as the lines delineating the roles of men and women within
contemporary society have become faint and more fluid Arguably hostels still exist
within a highly complex setting (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Page | 26
21 Contextualising hostels
Generally hostels were badly designed poorly built and many have been suffering
years of neglect (Thurman 1997) Hostels were primarily built to accommodate
African migrant workers for the containment of their labour over the duration of their
stay in what were demarcated as South Africarsquos white urban areas (Thurman 1997)
There are notably three types of hostels namely public sector private sector and
grey sector hostels (Ramphele 1993)
Public sector hostels are hostels that were built and managed by provincial or local
authorities and mainly accommodated workers across a range of sectors (Ramphele
1993) Private sector hostels were built by private sector enterprise to house private
sector labourers who would mainly be working in the factories and mines (Pienaar
and Crofton 2005) Grey sector hostels were built on public sector-owned land by the
private sector under some form of contractual agreement with a government
authority (provincial or local) but were largely managed and controlled by private
sector employers (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Public and grey sector hostels were
generally situated in the townships (Thurman 1997) However when they were
planned these hostels were generally located on the outskirts of the cities but with
increased urban growth they now relatively tend to be more centrally situated
(Thurman 1997)
Ramphele (1993) argued that each hostel had a distinct form and quality about it
Elements of tribalism certain customs systems of belief and association dimensions of
conflict and conflict resolution were not homogeneous across all hostels (Ramphele
1993) The type of work that the migrant labourers did across the sectors they worked
was often rudimentary It ranged from unskilled to very basic semi-skilled work and it
was quite labour intensive in return for meagre earnings (Ramphele 1993)
Historically hostels were characterised by two main geographic classifications firstly
hostels in the backdrop of an urban context (ie also referring to inner city hostels)
and secondly hostels in the areas around mines (Segal 1991) According to Segal
(1991) urban context hostels had a more diffused grouping of hostel dwellers than
their mining counterparts (Segal 1991) Hostels in urban context developed broader
and somewhat complex relations with the outside community This contrasted with
the extreme isolation of hostel dwellers in hostels around the mines Therefore hostels
in the urban context were to a lesser extent conceived to be lsquomore openrsquo and lsquoless
strictly controlledrsquo However both were essentially sites of control and exploitation
Page | 27
with clearly marked physical boundaries in form of high walls and fences with single
and restricted entry and exit points (Segal 1991)
Hostels in urban areas had government bureaucracies responsible for their
management and maintenance as opposed to a single employercompany (Segal
1991) Moreover hostels in the urban context accommodated a wider and more
diverse range of workers who did not necessarily work for the same
employercompany or have uniform working hours or shifts In urban hostels ethnicity
was not the official organiser of hostel dwellers as men from different backgrounds
and homelands would and could share rooms (Ramphele 1993) Lastly and perhaps
the most important distinguishing feature of the two was the fact that hostels in urban
areas were not under the extensive force of lsquototal controlrsquo as was the experience of
mining hostel dwellers (Segal 1991 Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
According to Pienaar and Crofton (2005) public sector hostels accommodated the
largest number of hostel dwellers Overall the quality of living environment of hostels
was generally poor but this was particularly bad in public sector hostels (Ramphele
1993) Additionally the administrative processes and management of public sector
hostels was under dire strain as no clear records of those that lived in the hostels or
those entering and exiting the hostel were kept (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that although private sector hostels were considered to be
better managed and maintained The general state of all hostels whether public or
privately owned was largely characterised by poor living conditions a lack of
privacy the sharing of very limited spaces a distressed local context and
overcrowded conditions (Ramphele 1993) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) further note
that around the early 1980s hostel residents simply started to withdraw from payment
of rentals and thus the maintenance of the hostels grew even thinner and steadily
non-existent Public sector hostels grew especially financially and politically
unmanageable (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
22 Key concepts theories ideas and arguments
To unpack the research question and contextualise the study within a broader
theoretical framework this section of the report will discuss and draw on a number of
concepts theories ideas and arguments
Page | 28
221 The historic model of hostels the conceptualisation of the hostel system
In grappling with the historic model of the hostel system this section of the report will
discuss two main themes The conceptualisation of the hostel system and migration
migrant labour as conceived under the hostel system It illustrates the effect hostels
have had on shaping the lives and experiences of their inhabitants in unique and
complex ways (Thurman 1997)
South Africa is a country marked by a legacy of systematic discrimination and the
deliberate disempowerment of a lsquocategoryrsquo of its population (Thurman 1997) Hostels
were established supported and perpetuated by methodical policy frameworks and
brute controls to discourage the permanent settlement of the in historically lsquowhite
areasrsquo (Segal 1991) Thurman (1997) argues that hostels occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are symbolic of three centuries of
systematic racial discrimination
Seemingly ignited by and originating in the mining industry in the nineteenth century
the construction of hostels reached a peak during the 1960s and 1970s in the period
that has been referred to as the ldquogrand apartheidrdquo years (Thurman 1997) They were
built as single-sex dormitory compounds to accommodate African migrant labourers
as sojourners in what were delineated as white urban areas (Ramphele 1993) In
hostels which were intended strictly for male migrant labourersrsquo job-seeking by
African women was criminalised and a deliberate policy not to provide family
housing was pursued (Ramphele 1993)
Common to hostels was the blurring and hostility of the boundaries between the
hostel dwellers place(s) of work and their living spaces (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) In
turn some authors have argued that hostels in some sense functioned as a lsquototal
institutionrsquo According to Segal (1991) and Ramphele (1993) geographically many
hostels were isolated and situated literally at the edges of urban areas and society in
general They were primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for
human comfort safety or enrichment (Thurman 1997) The heavy-handedness of the
hostel system imposed a cunning inferiority complex a sense of no escape yet quite
interestingly a later unwillingness and indifference to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have
their hostel converted into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Ramphele (1993) and Segal (1991) make a rather compelling argument and share
the view that the behaviour and conduct of some of the hostel dwellers against
Page | 29
having their hostel converted into family units is indicative of similar behaviour and
actions displayed by long-term prisoners and people contained in barracks They
argue that a substantial number of long-term inmates would in some instances
display great unwillingness and some difficulty to the prospect of re-entering society
after being socialised into a total institution a reformatory (Ramphele 1993 and
Segal 1991) According to a text by Statistics South Africa (2001) an institution can be
defined as a communal place of residence for persons with common characteristics
(Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001) One could then argue
that one of the common characteristics shared by many hostels was the migrant
labourer status attributed to them (Dyiki 2006)
222 Migration and the notion of migrant labour labourers as conceived under the hostel
system
Castles and Miller (2008) argues that all through time and space individuals and
families have been migrating and doing so for a number of reasons Universally the
migration lsquophenomenonrsquo was and has been as a result of varying factors and in
response to certain causes and events such as demographic growth environmental
changes development vs underdevelopment and the seeking of lsquobetterrsquo
opportunities (Castles and Miller 2008) Others have turned to migration to seek jobs
often located or perceived to be concentrated in larger urban centres (Collinson
and Adazu 2006 Castles and Miller 2008)
Migration can occur as a voluntary or forced process This study is particularly
interested in the event of migration that becomes forced migration when the
circumstances of individuals and families leave them little or no choice but to pursue
lsquohopersquo away from their native home-base (Castles and Miller 2008) Arguably this was
characteristic of the hostel model Hostels enabled mines and later other industries to
suppose and cause that hostel dwellers had homes in rural areas (Collinson 2006)
Seemingly the rural populace was the lsquodesiredrsquo workforce ushered into the city and
mines and exploited as labourers for the development of the urban-based economy
(Thurman 1997)
According to Thurman (1997) the residents of hostels were typically considered as
rural traditionalists and lsquodangerousrsquo outsiders by the residents of townships which
surrounded the hostel Their physical as well as social isolation meant that they often
retained strong links with their rural home-base (Segal 1991) This involved the
Page | 30
periodic movement of individual household members between the hostel and their
rural homes (Thurman 1997) The ruralurban linkages which were subsequently
fashioned became a distinguishing feature of not just hostel dwellers but the black
African populace and as a part of their experience of urban life (Collinson and
Adazu 2006) The costly urban world was thus considered by many as merely a place
of work (Segal 1991 and Ramphele 1993)
This type of migration - also often referred to as lsquocircularrsquo or lsquooscillatingrsquo migration -
became characteristic of a sort of temporary sentiment to life and living in the city
(Dyiki 2006) Additionally the events of circular migration presented certain
household dynamics and challenges in maintaining the often faint links between the
migrant and the households family left behind (Collionson 2006 Ramphele 1993)
Conceivably hostel dwellers have for a long time had a common rural orientation
(Segal 1991) ldquoIt has been repeatedly demonstrated that migrants do not leave
behind the countryside in their journey to the cityrdquo and this rural consciousness has
remained central to the migrant labour population (Segal 1991 9)
Within contemporary society the concept of lsquothe new economies of labour
migrationrsquo has emerged as an alternative position and argues that migration can be
and has become a household strategy (Collinson and Adazu 2006) According to
Collinson and Adazu (2006) within their analysis of contemporary migration patterns
migration has now largely become something that is purposefully chosen by
members of a household family This phenomenon involves the temporary migration
of some individuals within the household family in pursuit of opportunities towards
the collective betterment of the family household or even their broader community
(Collinson and Adazu 2006) Under this model of migration family and community
networks are considered to play an important and supporting role in facilitating
migration between urban-based and village-based households families (Collinson
and Adazu 2006) What is then required of the migrant is thatheshe reciprocate the
initial support offered by hisher household family community as received in hisher
rural-base (Collinson and Adazu 2006)
While in some respect migration is becoming a lsquolonged-forrsquo process and somewhat of
a deliberate choice on the other hand adverse circumstances force families
households to partake in this process as a means of survival (Collinson and Adazu
2006) The ability of migrants to maintain both an urban and rural residence in
whatever context ie historic or contemporary continues to present a social
geographic and economically complex state of affairs (Pienaar and Crofton (2005)
Page | 31
223 The notion of bedhold
The context of hostels designed to be uncomfortable and uninviting the closest
likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo was in the form of a bed Every aspect of life and
survival in hostels revolved around a bed (Ramphele 1993) According to Ramphele
(1993) this in turn perpetuated a circumstance of lsquoclientelismrsquo and blurred the lines of
patronage when it came to the exchanging of the membership of beds and when
beds were to be allocated or reallocated (Ramphele 1993) The ill-defined and fluid
relationship of patronage between bed-holders would in some respect function like
and resemble households (Ramphele 1993 Segal 1991 Mosoetsa 2011)
In some sense bed-holders assumed an intermediary role and served an informal
function as lsquolandlordsrsquo thus as proprietors of the bedhold (Ramphele 1993) Hostel
dwellers became lsquobed-holdersrsquo rather than lsquohouse-holdersrsquo in the urban space
(Segal 1991) It became unduly problematic that the bed was the only space over
which they could have any measure of control It after all distorted the perceptions
hostel dwellers developed of themselves in relation to their environment constraining
them to varying degrees (Ramphele 1993) Ramphele (1993) argues that the limits set
by physical space in hostels also defined in very clear terms the inside versus the
outside security versus insecurity family versus non-family and urban versus rural She
further argues that onersquos very identify in the hostel and their lsquolegal existencersquo in the
urban space depended on their attachment to a bed (Ramphele 1993) According
to Ramphele (1993) the bed acted as a sort of mediator thus lsquoa go-betweenrsquo the
hostel dwellers and the rest of society to which they remain somewhat disconnected
and possibly indifferent (Ramphele 1993)
224 The stigma of hostel life
The stigma of hostel life gave a rather conspicuous meaning to lsquoblack urban lifersquo and
their experience(s) of life in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were badly
designed poorly built and many suffer years of neglect (Thurman 1997) There have
been a number of authors who have argued that hostel dwellers suffered a great
injustice to their humanity their perception of self constrained relations with others
and a constant struggle to maintain family networks with their often rural-base
(Goldblatt and Mentjies 1996)
Page | 32
The living conditions in hostels have been expressed in basic terms as shocking
disgusting inhumane cruel and intolerable by both scholars and residents of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Hostel accommodation is undesirable both aesthetically and
conceptually and there are a number of common features which characterise most
hostels a lack of privacy overcrowded and poor living conditions very limited space
and a serious state of disrepair (Ramphele 1993) Failing to delineate private
personal space the purpose of hostels was to ensure a compliant labour force (Segal
1991)
According to Ramphele (1993) hostels represent physical space that is not only
limited but is also limiting Ramphele makes a distinction between the circumstance
and living arrangements of hostel dwellers and township residents Arguing that
although physical overcrowding of sleeping accommodation between the two
(hostel dwellers and township residents) many not be much different in terms of the
ratio of people to roomsbeds (Ramphele 1993) For township residents it is most likely
that they would be sharing these limited facilities with kin or friends rather than
complete strangers (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of hostels some men
women may adapt too well to living in single-sex hostels and would find change too
difficult to cope with (Ramphele 1993)
225 Family versus household configurations
The terms family and household are not necessarily synonymous According to the
Department of Social Development (2012) ldquoa household comprises of either (i) a
single person who makes provision(s) for hisher food or other essentials for living or (ii)
a group of at least two or more people living together who make common provision
for their food and other essentialsrdquo (White Paper on Families in South Africa 2012 11)
Moreover the Department notes that a household can contain a family yet the
members of the household are not always necessarily a family further remarking that
ldquoa household performs the functions of providing a place of dwelling and the sharing
of resources and these functions can be performed among people who are related
by blood or people without any such relationshiprdquo (White Paper on Families in South
Africa 2012 11) This distinction of family and household configurations is useful to this
study for two main reasons (a) as it has been suggested that one of the broad aims of
the hostel conversion approach is to introduce facilitate lsquofamily lifersquo and to inject a
family quality into these historically single-sex environments (b) Is it then supposed by
the Sethokga hostel conversion project that the household configurations in the
hostel are at present existing wholly in the absence of family configurations
Page | 33
It is important to be mindful of the fact that with time households have become
more complex and family structures more diffused (Mosoetsa 2011) Hostel dwellers
through years of living under space constraints and in single-sex accommodation
have developed certain ideologies practices and habits (Thurman 1997) Arguably
the hostel system redefined and reshaped family and household configurations and
constructed a complex social setting (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of male
occupied hostels relationships among men are characterised by hierarchy and
Ramphele (1993) notes that this is legitimised by lsquotraditionrsquo and is based on age
differences The older men are more likely to occupy positions of authority and be
regarded as the lsquoheadsrsquo of the household and in authority to organise the affairs of
the household Whereas the younger men would be cast in the role of attending to
duties considered lsquotypicalrsquo to women and that is the upkeep of the household ie
cleaning cooking In this lsquomanrsquos worldrsquo tradition and age regulate the day-to-day
function of the household (Ramphele 1993) The links between the men and the
families they had have left behind has arguably become increasingly scant and
incoherent (Grieger et al 2013) With the blurring of their lsquobindingrsquo reciprocal
obligations and support the conception of family life was redefined and put under
considerable strain as a result of migrant labour laws and the criminalisation of job-
seeking activity in urban areas of their rural wives partners (Segal 1991)
In both family and household configurations shared obligations and mutual support
takes many forms (Mapetla 2005) The family structure is perceived to be the
lsquocommander and regulator of the activities and conduct of the individual members
The family structure has been set apart from a household in that a household is more
of a residential unit where related andor none-related individuals in a sense lsquoeat
from the same potrsquo (Mosoetsa 2011) In some cases the individuals and members of
a household provide themselves jointly with food andor other essentials however a
household can also consist of a person who lives alone The distinguishing feature is
that a family configuration consists of people individuals who have a blood-kin
connection and this can include immediate and extended relatives but the same
does not necessarily always hold true for household configurations (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005 Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001)
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing
South Africa can still somewhat be regarded as a traditionally patrilineal society
where land and property are traced through the male lineage where upon marriage
Page | 34
a woman is required to leave her native home to reside with her husband at his home
(Mapetla 2005) This system has been more inclined to empower men (Ziehl 2001)
Subsequently within contemporary society and within the lsquonew politics of gender
relationsrsquo property and land ownership have since become a highly contentious
subject Therefore the issue of housing is quite a significant one and warrants some
reflection particularly the aspect of men and housing (Mapetla 2005)
Gender roles have steadily been changing and are increasingly becoming ill-defined
(Ziehl 2001) So how can or rather how should housing projects and interventions
such as hostel conversion projects be more gender sensitive inclusive representative
and reflective of the changing gender roles both in a social and spatial sense
Gender considerations regarding housing and housing projects need to be mindful of
the innate differentiation between men and women and their not always uniform
needs and interaction(s) with space (Mapetla 2005) The often male bias when it
comes to access to housing might just further be perpetuated through hostel
conversion projects The question here is then does this new conception of a
reconfigured living environment in the form of family units make provision(s) towards
addressing any of the housing-related gender biases What do these projects
consider important in terms of gender issues if at all how have these issues been
factored into the projects
Gender and housing related theory has often argued strongest the case of women in
their inability to access housing land the law and related funding (Ziehl 2001) The
issues of gender relations and access to housing have become increasingly topical
(Mosoetsa 2011) Womenrsquos rights access to the law resources and social amenities
have been areas which have gained a significant amount of traction in both policy
and academic circles owing to historically discriminatory laws (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005) However in South Africa and perhaps this is true for many other
societies traditionally culturally and even spiritually men are still to a significant extent
regarded as the head of household the foremost provider for their families (Mapetla
2005)
Within the context of hostels migrant labour laws which also made it a point that the
remuneration of its African labour workforce was as horrendous as the conditions they
lived in shaped a particular aspect of menrsquos relation to housing in the urban context
and their experiences (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In a study conducted by Segal
(1991) a group of men living in a hostel were interviewed to give their account of life
in the hostel According to Segal (1991) it became apparent that the men tolerated
the hostel because they felt humiliated by even the thought of losing their roles as the
Page | 35
provider for their family Some men suggested that they could and would not bring
their wives or children to the hostel for even a brief visit (Segal 1991) In their minds
they were better off alone in the citymine because the burden of their own survival
was already enormous (Segal 1991)
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy
Large sections of the South African state have continued to be institutionally
ineffective unsustainable and dysfunctional (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert 2011) Post-
1994 efforts towards nation-building and state formation in the country have taken
many forms a unitary state the inauguration of a new president of the Republic of
South Africa and the promulgation of the 1996 Constitution of the Republic(Barnet
1999) Furthermore the ideals of nation building and state formation would attempt
to diffuse into a sound and convergent form what was once opposite and adverse
(von Holdt 2010)
The housing deficit in the country was and has continued to be one of the greatest
challenges facing the government particularly the inadequate provision and access
to housing for the black majority who had been rendered destitute and occupying
dreadful accommodation (Thurman 1997) In what could better be regarded as
temporary disaster relief areas than housing suitable for any human to call lsquohomersquo
(Ramphele 1993) Post-apartheid bureaucratic inefficiency class formation
redundant budgetary rituals antagonistic attitudes towards public service vocation
and authority has greatly stifled service delivery imperatives ie social housing
provision (von Holdt 2010) Undoubtedly the role of policy towards addressing issues
such as housing and service delivery is a significant one (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert
2011) this will be discussed further in chapter four
228 The role and significance of community public participation in hostel conversion to
family unitrsquos projects
Public participation in any context is a complex and at times a contentious exercise
Academic literature on community public participation tends to presuppose an
experience or existence of informal unambiguous or authentic relations in
community participation processes (Mdunyelwa 2015) This particularly in housing
related projects and programmes with the assumption that if all the stakeholders
involved are consulted the process of participation is likely to yield positive results and
success (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) In South Africa the notion of public
Page | 36
community participation has gained popularity as a democratic practice essential
for development and nation-building (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their research project entitled ldquoA
Case Study of participation in the City Deep Hostel Redevelopmentrdquo suggests that
there are more complex and less diffused forces at play According to Benit-Gbaffou
and Mathoho (2010) the central question often becomes when and at what point
can one say people have effectively or meaningfully participated This question is
especially relevant and significance to hostel conversion projects and to efforts to re-
configure hostels as lsquofamily units suitable for family lifersquo (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010) According to state policy the hostel conversion redevelopment approach is
and has been a nation-wide intervention initiated by the post-1994 government to
redevelop convert hostels in efforts to de-stigmatise these historically-laden spaces
(Dyiki 2006) Moreover the current Minister of Human Settlement has of late stated
on a number of media platforms the hostel conversion approach also seeks to
rehabilitate these historically single-sex migrant labour compounds into family
apartmentsunits to promote a family-oriented setting (Sisulu 2015) According to a
2001 text by Statistics South Africa ldquoconverted or upgraded hostels should be treated
in the same way as a block of flats and each unit considered as a separate housing
unitrdquo (Statistics South Africa Census2001 3)
The importance and usefulness of public community participation in hostel
conversion projects have been a widely and overly debated topic However this
does not wholly take away from the fact that there are many and varied obstacles
and challenges when it comes to the actual practice and experience of
participation on the ground (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) Even while the political
and socio-economic contexts of every project are varied with different structures and
the coordination of stakeholders take on different forms (Mdunyelwa 2015) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) argue that participation has often become a political
process riddled in processes of negotiation and rampant differences of opinion
coupled with a mix of personal andor political ambitions (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010)
Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their study of the City Deep Hostel
Redevelopment Project outlined a number of issues which the project encountered
before during and after the hotel redevelopment project there included
Page | 37
Before the redevelopment process
Managing change while also trying to mitigate violence the unauthorised
occupation of tenants wanting to gain the benefits of the redevelopment project
and the allocation of units (as a contentious challenge) were cited as challenges
encountered before the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
During the process
Challenges around the design of the units (limitations and constraints with respect to
skills time and finances) the issue of labour the provision of public and social
facilities services (ie cregraveches play areas for the children) were cited as being
encountered during the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
Issues after the project
Tariff rates (with electricity as one of the biggest concerns) along with the
disagreement and discontentment around rental payments were cited as the
challenges which were encountered post the hostel redevelopment process A
central question and concern that arose focused on whether the hostel did not just
became a renovated workersrsquo hostel or if it actually did change into actual family
units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
With the study area for this research in mind I am left wondering if the issues identified
by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) are unique to the City Deep contextproject
or are they to some extent representative and reverberate to the broader
challenges and limitations of hostel conversion projects across the country Certainly
there is some value to participation when it comes to hostel conversion
redevelopment but the process of participation particularly within the context of
hostels as politically and socio-economically volatile environments will most likely be
confronted by sturdy issues of inherent sensitivities and nuances (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010) This is what Mdunyelwa (2015) decisively refers to as binary cultural
political and social structures alluding to the sentiment that some hostel dwellers are
in some respect men and women of two minds set free from the physical shackles of
oppression yet still sadly unable and ill-equipped to live and transform their thinking
well beyond that (Mdunyelwa 2015)
Page | 38
23 Conclusion
Typically the body of work that exists on hostels is unambiguously and largely
concentrated on the historically-laden context of hostels It especially articulates
issues of violent conflict and tension within hostels and their surrounding areas
Conflict situations are often captioned as hostel versus township lsquowarsrsquo There is an
important political backdrop to this which relates to the rural urban links made
mention of in this chapter
Furthermore the poor living conditions of hostels the inadequate provision of services
and social amenities should be considered The loss of family life and the sense that
hostels pose as limited spaces which is a negative reflection on to dignity of its
inhabitants are some of elements associated with the stigma of hostel life (Bonner
and Nieftagodien 2012 Ramphele 1993) This has to quite a significant extent
remained a present-day and associated reality of the hostel setting and has posed
vast challenges to hostel conversion redevelopment projects
This chapter has argued that the landscape of hostels has by and large remained
complex at times perplexing and highly contentious As a resultant the wicked
consequences of the hostel system have been many and varied but all of which
warrant due attention The theoretical backdrop on hostels has been useful in
developing themes that resonate with the case study Sethokga hostel Of particular
relevance to the case study will be role and significance of community public
participation in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Highlighting some of the
issues encountered before and during the project as the project has not yet been
completed Certain aspects of the discussion on key concepts theories arguments
and ideas and how they resonate with the case study will be explored further
Particularly the notion of bedhold the aspect of men and housing the stigma of
hostel life and the resultant consequences of the hostel system will be critically
discussed in chapter five which examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project
Page | 39
Introducing Sethokga hostel
3 Introduction
In addition to the study area this chapter will in greater detail describe and locate
Sethokga hostel It examines its local as well as municipal context and presents a
visual narrative of the hostel The aim of the visual narrative is to provide the reader
with a lsquosensersquo of the physical setting of the hostel thus to provide the reader with a
visual depiction of the multifaceted circumstance of the hostel and the complex
challenges in which its residents endure Chapter three largely seeks to provide the
reader with an impression of the context in which the Sethokga hostel conversion
project is taking place
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)
In the period between 1890 and the late 1920s Ekurhuleni (at the time referred to as
the East Rand region of the Transvaal Province) experienced increased numbers of
black male workersmigrants This was as a result of a surge in the gold mining sector
which took place on the Witwatersrand gold reefs (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
According to Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) of the 15 000 workers that were
employed in the sector some 5 000 worked in what is now called the Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality With time the number of workers in the Ekurhuleni area
continued to rise considerably most of who were oscillating migrants who were either
accommodated in labour compounds such as hostels or shanty settlements in
townships across Ekurhuleni such as Tembisa Duduza Tsakane Kwa-Thema and so
forth (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) also argue that for most of the period of the
booming mining sector in the Witwatersrand reef to well into the countryrsquos
democratic dispensation political contention in hostels had long been a common
feature throughout the region As a consequence hostels and a number of the
townships in Ekurhuleni have somewhat continued to exist within a circumstance of
deep-seated antagonistic political and socio-economic conditions (Bonner and
Nieftagodien 2012)
Sethokga hostel is one of the largest hostels in the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan region
according to the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis Study in 2014 there
Page | 40
were approximately 12 120 residents living in the hostel (Demacon 2014) Of that
roughly 4 000 have since the beginning of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
been relocated or reallocated within other blocks in the hostel to make way for the
construction of the family units (Demacon 2014) Some of the relocations of residents
have been to alternative sites outside the hostel to either Enhlanzeni hostel or
Vusimuzi hostel both situated in the Tembisa area (Demacon 2014)Interestingly
Enhlanzeni as well as Vusimizi hostels are also experiencing issues of overcrowding
poor living conditions and similar socio-economic conditions to Sethokga Moreover
neither Enhlanzeni nor Vusimuzi hostel have or are undergoing upgrading
conversion It was not clear in the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis
Study what the reasons for relocating the residents of Sethokga to these hostels were
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni hostel and
Vusimuzi hostel
Source Demacon 2014
Page | 41
311 Geographic description of the study
Sethokga hostel was built in 1980 and much like other hostels across the country the
Sethokga hostel was badly designed poorly built and has been suffering years of
neglect Sethokga hostel is a public sector type hostel and is owned by the
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Sethokga was built to accommodate male
migrant labourers from a range of industries (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Similar to
numerous other hostels men could live in the hostel so long as they had work in
industries but wives partners and families were prohibited from residence (Thurman
1997) They were entitled only to short-term visiting permits Regular and violent raids
which were carried out by authorities during the day and at night would rigorously
enforce these regulations to chase away arrest or bus back the wives partners and
families of the men back to the homelands (Thurman 1997)
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi initially the hostel
accommodated a lsquomixturersquo of residents black men across all tribes and ethnicities
but he recalls the change that occurred in the 1990s in response to political shifts He
recalls that ldquoafter the release of Mandela and when they started preaching lsquothis
thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions happened according to who was Zulu or
Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Below the ward
councillor explains what he saw as some of the factors that led to what is currently
the strong predominance of Pedi and Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel
suggesting that ldquoThere were mixed feeling when talks were rife concerning
negotiations that could lead to possible elections because the IFP (Inkatha Freedom
Party) was rejecting such a notion At the time it was a situation of the Zulursquos terrorizing
the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa and standing with the white man The
Zulursquos did not like such an idea which caused a divide among the Zulu and Xhosa
This led to conflict between the Xhosa and the Zulu There was fighting everywhere in
the country and you found some Pedis Venda and Tsongarsquos ran away from certain
hostels because they were being chased out and some landed up in Sethokga (
Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) The points made by Cllr Mohlapamaswi flag some
interesting points for instance that this hostel in some respect played the role of a
place of refuge and might affect how residents view it
Sethokga hostel is situated on approximately 22 hectares of land and consists of 29 U-
shaped single and two storey dormitories but mainly consists of the two storey walk-up
dormitories (Demacon 2014) The hostel lies on medium dolomitic soil despite this it
has been said and reported that over the years this has not had a significant impact
Page | 42
on much of the structural qualities of the hostel (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) The
structural sturdiness of the hostel is said to have been mitigated through precautions
such as drainage and the assembly of lsquowellrsquo positioned pavements (Demacon 2014)
According to the ward councillor there are a few women and children living in the
hostel although it is not quite clear how many They are however not recognised as
lsquolegitimatersquo residence of Sethokga (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Arguably a
number of the hostel redevelopment conversion projects that have taken place
across the country have been as a response to the prevailing presence of women
and children who had come to live in the hostel The fact that this hostel has
remained predominantly male occupied presents a number contextual dimensions
to the hostel conversion project This will be explored in chapter five which will
examine the conceptualisation of the hostel conversion project
According to Thurman (1997) it is not uncommon in hostels for up to three families to
live in one room measuring 20 square metres Such rooms were designed to
accommodate two to three workers or even up to twenty people to share a sink a
shower and toilet (Thurman 1997) Yet lsquowholersquo families ie husbands wives children
or extended families have not moved into Sethokga Overcrowding remains a
concern and privacy is scarce in the hostel (Demacon 2014) The dormitories have
very limited physical space and little room for manoeuvre The typical floor plan of a
hostel is provided on the next page and depicts the rigid rudimentary and restrained
design of the hostel compound Sethokga hostel has identical floor plans and
elevations
Page | 43
Floor plan of a typical dormitory compound
Source Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
Figure 1 Ground Floor Plan
Figure 2 First Floor Plan
Figure 3 Elevation
Page | 44
312 Locality
The hostel is situated in the East Rand region of the Gauteng province within the
municipal administrative jurisdiction of the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (EMM)
in the Kempton Park ndash Tembisa Customer Care Area It is located in the north-eastern
region region B of the EMM in the township of Tembisa and lies to the south of the
Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and to the east of the City of Johannesburg
Moreover the hostel is lies between the Kempton Park Pretoria railway link near
Oakmoor station thus a multipurpose and inter-as well as intra-regional public
transport node It is well serviced in terms of public transport and easily accessible
from the R21 (Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
Map 2 Locality map
Source Google maps 2015
Source EkurhuleniGIS 2015
Page | 45
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex
313 Local and municipal context
Tembisa is one of the largest townships in the metro and it is situated in region A of the
EMM towards the north-western end of the municipality The hostel lies in ward four of
the metro to the east of Midrand and to the west of one of the most affluent suburbs
in region A Glen Marais along with other high income areas such as Serengeti Golf
Estate Midstream and the suburb of Edenvale (Demacon 2014)
The Integrated Development Plan (IDP) for the Oakmoor area Area 19 of the metrorsquos
Local Integrated Development Plan (LIDP) was last prepared in 2000 The report
contained among its leading aims to establish an integrated framework to guide and
facilitate development interventions in the area (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000) It was documented in the report that the SDP would guide the
Page | 46
municipalityrsquos decisions in the development and management of the area in a way
that the report articulates as follows by encouraging and setting the framework for
private sector investment and initiatives and by seeking to strengthen economic
activity in the area through the identification of specific projects and programmes
which would kick-start development and lastly working towards improving service
delivery (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) The report reviews the
historically context of the area and argues that basically no provision was made for
service delivery or the adequate management of land and no consideration of land
use imperatives was given This was the case throughout the Tembisa Township (SJN
Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Furthermore the report established that the general land-use pattern across most of
the township was mainly comprised of residential developments It was in this 2000
Integrated Development Plan that it was overtly and in retrospect alluded to that
Tembisa had been established to function at that time as a dormitory settlement for
the neighbouring economic centres of the East Rand region such as Kempton Park
Olifantsfontein and Midrand (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
An abstract in 2000 SDF report(SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000 stated
the following that investigations had confirmed that the Sethokga hostel buildings
were structurally sound except for some weather proofing of external walls and basic
finishes to walls floors and ceiling Some repair work to cracks and precautions to pre-
empt future cracking may be necessary but the hostel blocks would offer little
difficulty in terms of conversion into single and family units According to the report
there seemed to be more problems with engineering services For example the
internal sewer reticulation was said to be so dilapidated that it may have needed to
be replaced entirely Parts of the water supply network would need to be replaced
fire hydrants installed electricity supply upgraded and grading of roads and storm-
water disposal required substantial attention (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
When the completed report was presented in 2000 it set out a case that the
municipality was currently negotiating with a non-profit organisation to acquire hostel
land and convert the hostel buildings into single and family units and manage such
housing stock (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) It further documented
that the lsquoultimatersquo number of dwelling units would be about 1200 with the first phase
of development to deliver 500 units The report suggested that the development
would be undertaken by an external organisation and that few planning guidelines
Page | 47
would need to be proposed to harmonize Sethokga hostel residential complex with
the rest of the Tembisa Township In the report it is assumed that the hostel conversion
would should result in a lsquosecurity complexrsquo type of housing development and
access to the complex would be gained mainly from local distributors such as the
extension of MbizaIzimbongi Street and Nyarhi Street (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000)
The report argued for change in the household profile of the hostel and this would
result in an increased demand for additional social facilities such as schools cregraveches
churches libraries play area(s) etc It was found in the report that space intensive (in
terms of size) social facilities eg cregraveches and a multipurpose centre should be
encouraged within the complex (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Additionally limited retail specifically corner shops should be established within the
complex Lastly the report suggested that it was important to align the services in the
area with the rest of the EMM and ensure adequate capacity at points where the
services connected into the hostel Roads in particular were highlighted as important
in this regard to ensure continuity and appropriate distribution of traffic movement
What is more the report states that traffic should be discouraged within the new
settlement (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
The SDF marked the entire Sethokga hostel complex as lsquohostel upgradingrsquo married to
public open space within the vicinity of the complex churches sports fields and
mixed use areas were proposed in the SDF (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
Page | 48
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework (SDF) 2000
The development proposals in the 2000 Oakmoor area19 SDF proposed that Sethokga hostel be
Redeveloped into family units The SDF also proposed mixed use nodal developments within and around
the Oakmoor area and proposed additional facilities such as cregraveches schools and recreational
facilities in certain areas
Source SJN Development Planning Consultants Planning Area 19 Oakmoor Development
Plan Development Proposals Final Report 2000
This SDF for the area is quite old and has not been updated
since this 2000 plan
Sethokga
hostel
Page | 49
There are 22 hostels across Ekurhuleni which are spread across six regions in the metro
(Demacon 2014) Region A has two hostels of which one is government owned
region B has three hostels of which government owns two regions C D and E hosts
one hostel respectively while region F has sixteen hostels (it is not clear how many are
owned by government) (Demacon 2014)
In terms of social facilities and amenities the study area is situated within a 3km radius
from two schools Rabasotho Combined School and Philena Middle School It is also
within a 2km radius from a healthcare facility - Esselen Park Satellite Clinic - and within
a 1km radius from a sporting facility - Esselen Park Sports School of Excellence
(Demacon 2014) The nearest police station is roughly 6km away and a lsquogenerousrsquo
number of shopping as well as entertainment centres are found within a 15 to 20km
radius of the hostel The nearest taxi route is less than 100m with the nearest train
stations including the Tembisa Limindlela and Kaalfontein stations all falling within a
10km radius (Demacon 2014)
In 2013 the Tembisa economy contributed 83 to the overall economy of the EMM
whilst Ekurhuleni contributed 253 to the overall economy of the Gauteng province
in 2013 (Demacon 2014) Sethokga hostel forms part of the Kempton Park Tembisa
precinct and according the Sethokga Hostels Mixed Typology Market Analysis Report
it falls within the development context of the Kempton Park Tembisa precinct It hosts
a range of housing typologies supported under various housing programmes
(Demacon 2014) which include but are not limited to Informal Settlement Upgrading
programmes and projects Integrated Residential Development Programmes(s) and
Gap Market Housing Units According to this report there also exists several
opportunities for the development of medium to higher density residential
developments (Demacon 2014) The EMMs 2010 Metropolitan Spatial Development
Framework suggests that among the several intentions of the metro the EMM will seek
to expand the affordable housing market and that it will seek to accommodate a
wider range of the metrorsquos populace by making a range of housing options available
for people across different income groupings (Demacon 2014)
This next section exhibits the lsquoambiencersquo of Sethokga hostel as it currently stands It
delves into some detail regarding the current setting of the hostel and takes the
reader through the authorrsquos experience being in the hostel and lsquotravellingrsquo through its
narrow corridors It shares my experience of going into this dauntingly male
dominated environment riddled with metaphorical tones of disempowerment
despondency and neglect All the images displayed here were taken by the author
Page | 50
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel
In terms of its infrastructure the hostel is said to still be somewhat structurally sound
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005) Aesthetically however it appears quite old and rundown
and leaves a lot to be desired The neglected state of refuse and rubble removal
adds to the wear and tear appearance of the hostel Each of the blocks that make-
up the hostel consists of separate dormitories and entry into each dormitory is gained
through a common access point - a door - that leads into a communal area with a
basic cooking and dining area There are no ceilings in any of the dormitories The
paint-work both inside and outside has long worn out In general the hostel appears
especially dull and unsightly
321 Built form architecture
Figure 4
The hostel is old and run-down
The adjoining hostel blocks are lined with a
number of lsquoinformalrsquo traders
This area that leads into one of the hostel
blocks is where a resident displays his goods
for selling
Page | 51
A number of the men have cars which they
park in their respective blocks
Walk-up that leads into one of the dorms
that is later photographed and shows the
condition of the interior of the hostel
The hostel is in an obvious state of neglect
and refuse removal is ignored
I spotted a number of chickens roaming about
in the hostel and a small vegetable garden
near one of the entrances into a dorm
There is one entry and exit point into most of
the blocks in the hostel
Page | 52
Figure 5
This is a communal cooking area It was said
that because the stove is so old and has a
number of issues the electricity powering the
stove is never turned off and so it runs
constantly through the day and night time
The area next to the cooking area is where
groceries and other goods are stored for
safe-keeping
This communal dining area also leads into
the rest of the dorm and the place where the
hostel dwellers sleep
None of the dorms have ceilings or any
added furnishings (ie lighting) The hostel
has never been re-painted or renovated
since it was built in the early 1980s
Page | 53
This corridor leads into the bedrooms where
the men sleep Sheets andor curtains lead to
what felt like very restricted distressing and
unpleasent living quarters
The compartments offer very limited room to
move around and offer little privacy There
are two beds per compartment with up to
three people sharing a bed The living
conditions are as what Ramphele (1993)
described as constraining to varying degrees
since it is a physically restricted environment
with blurred boundaries of personal private
space The physical proximity to others offers
practically no prospect for privacy or liberty
to accommodate visitors
Page | 54
Figure 6
322 Municipal amenities
Male urinal
Communal toilet
Communal shower
Most of the hostel blocks in the hostel have
electricity yet it seems to be offered for
free
The entrance (door) leading to the one
communal shower and toilet facility There is
one bathroom per dorm
Page | 55
Figure 7
323 The adjoining area
Most of the blocks in the hostels have
communal indoor as well as outdoor taps
with running water provided without
charge
lsquoInformalrsquo activity trade takes place in
and around the hostel
The council offices are situated adjacent to
one of the hostel blocks across the street
The municipality does not collect refuse in
the hostel so it is up to the hostel residents to
dispose of their refuse (it was not clear why
the municipality did not collect refuse in the
hostel)
Page | 56
According to the (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) entry and access to the hostel are
determined by ones ability to negotiate for a bed Much like what was described by
Ramphele (1993) the closest likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo in hostels was in the form
of a bed this persists at Sethokga To some extent every aspect of life and survival in
Sethokga revolves around a bed
One gains entry into Sethokga through a block chairperson (Sololo interview 2015)
Some of the functions and responsibilities of these block chairpersonrsquos is to know what
is happening in that particular hostel block The illustration given by the economic
representative for the ward Mr Sololo was that
ldquoWhatever which has been happening in a particular block the chairperson
should be aware of it and should call a meeting Letrsquos say if you are sitting in a
block here and you have got a jukebox and you find that you are selling
liquor and now they tell you that by 10 orsquoclock you close down and the music
should be off Then you do not comply with that the block chairperson will
report you to the hostel committee and they will sit and come up with a fine
for you if you do not listen even after they fine you they will chase you out of
the hostelrdquo
According to Sololo interview (2015) the block chairpersons maintain peace and
order and need to ensure that any conflict is mediated They are elected by the
residents of a given block and are entrusted with their grievances Ideally they should
be first point of contact before anything is to be escalated to the ward councillor ie
if a pipe bursts and they are without water This would need to be reported to the
EMM by either the block chairperson and if the problem remains unresolved it is then
escalated to the ward councillor (Sololo interview 2015)
33 Conclusion
Chapter three has explored a number of elements which model the status quo of the
study field Ironically the conditions in the hostel are not much different to many of
the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg Sethokga hostel also resembles
many other hostels across the country The hostel is overcrowded there is little room
to manoeuvre and there is an obvious lack of privacy The hostel is a possible health
hazard to those who live in it
Page | 57
This chapter shared some of my own experience of the hostel My experience consisted out
of being in the hostel taking photographs in and around the hostel and engaging with the
living environment Inside the hostel I was engulfed by its narrow poorly lit and what felt like
stifling corridors Corridors divided by curtains and sheets led into what were very confined
sleeping compartments Beds offer a place of rest for those who have voluntarily or
involuntarily sought refuge in the hostel Many after all consider the hostels as a lsquobetterrsquo
alternative to homelessness The experience for me was unlike any I have ever felt since the
circumstance of my life has provided a certain comfort that was surely challenged in the
modest time that I spent at Sethokga Chapter four examines what has been the states
approach to hostel conversion
Page | 58
The statesrsquo approach to hostel conversion
4 Introduction
The discussion in this chapter will reflect and review South African state policy post-1994
that concerns hostels Chapter four will also critically discuss and describe the
fundamentals of what have been considered two of the leading approaches to hostel
redevelopment conversion namely the Hostel Redevelopment Programmes (HRP) and
the Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach
There have been a number of state interventions post-1994 that have seemingly been a
lsquosignrsquo of governments lsquodesirersquo to improve the living conditions of not just hostel residents
but of a vast majority of South Africanrsquos who were subjected to poor living conditions
(Thurman 1997) However for the purpose of this study there will be particular focus on
interventions around hostels In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005) concur with a few
other authors that during post democracy the South African government introduced
along with other housing programmes a hostel upgrading conversion programme
aimed primarily at converting hostels into integrated family-oriented developments
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
South Africarsquos housing policy was launched in 1994 and the housing subsidy scheme
promised to deliver one million houses in five years (UrbanLankMark 2011) This would be
delivered through a range of subsidy mechanisms (UrbanLankMark 2011) According to
Dyiki interview(2015) in 1995 or about 1996 a National Hostel Redevelopment Policy was
approved and was among one of the primary national housing programmes (Dyiki
interview 2015) To facilitate nation-building and effective state formation it was believed
that social programmes such as state funded housing programmes would play a pivotal
role in this regard (Netshitenzhe 2011) Moreover the nation-building agenda saw the
government set the country bold and far-reaching goals and these somewhat became
associated with certain policies ideologies and norms (Netshitenzhe 2011) However
redundant budgetary rituals inadequate feasibility studies weak project evaluation
bureaucratic inefficiency managing community expectations and political interference
have been some of the issues that have held back progress (von Holdt 2010 and
Pienaar 2010) As a result housing provided by government has often been poorly
Page | 59
located and in some respect it has continued to perpetuate a reality of spatial
segregation (Charlton et al 2014)
This next section will describe how the hostel conversion approach has been articulated
through state policy through subsequent grants and schemes
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach
Through the provision of grants and schemes government has made efforts to provide
funding for the redevelopment conversion of hostels However there has been
somewhat of a bias on public sector hostels as the grants are provided mainly for the
redevelopment conversion of hostels owned by municipalities or provincial government
(Department of Human Settlements 2015) In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
provide a synopsis of some of governmentsrsquo earliest approaches to addressing lsquothe hostel
issuersquo (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) This is summarised as follows
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Peoples Housing Process
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme (this will be discussed in
section 42)
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Arguably the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units
Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of state efforts to grapple with the vast
challenges around hostels hostel life and the social ills that have become endemic to
hostels (Dyiki 2006) The essence of the approaches listed below was that hostels would
be redeveloped converted to create sustainable human living conditions To re-
integrated these hostel communities into the surrounding township communities (Pienaar
and Cloete 2005)
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership was premised on
the notion that Developers this could also include the municipality would be able to
submit project proposals for the development of housing on stands that were serviced for
people who qualified in terms of eligibility criteria eg a combined household income of
Page | 60
the beneficiary versus the available subsidy amount provided by the state Households
would then be required to contribute to the development (that is the construction of their
house) from their own savings or through what was referred to as lsquosweet equityrsquo
(providing their own material and labour) Locational and geographic factors would also
affect the amount of the subsidy by 2005 Pienaar and Cloete (2005) noted that this
subsidy had delivered an approximate 13 million homes which were primarily low-cost
free-standing
In the case of hostels redevelopment one option was that the subsidy could be used to
build new free-standing dwellings for individual full title ownership on unused portions of
land within hostel complexes This option would require sub-division of the land as well as
the installation of additional service Under the provisions of the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme another option would be to convert existing dormitories into family
apartments that could be sold off to beneficiaries under sectional title This sectional title
is a form of ownership where an individual holds title to a dwelling unit it can be a free-
standing unit or part of a multi-unit storey building The individual owns title together
with all the other owners of sectional dwellings on that property an undivided share of the
land on which the dwellings are built (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) However the challenge
was that where existing dormitories were converted and sold under title the projects
would be exposed to a host of problems that sectional title properties generally
encountered in low-income areas in the private sector ie poor management and
maintenance and difficulties in collecting levies and service debts (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process
The Peoplersquos Housing Process was reportedly introduced to enable communities
particularly those in disadvantaged areas to participate in the provision of their own
housing without the participation interference or involvement of private developers
However technical and administrative support and consultation would be offered by
Housing Support Organisations which were approved to serve this function (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005) What were termed as facilitation grants would be made available by the
government to lsquokick-startrsquo the housing projects The beneficiaries could apply for a grant
to pay for the services rendered by the Housing Support Organisation(s) and the housing
subsidy would be the same as for what was contained in the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) hostel residents could as a
community collective make use of this avenue as a means of obtaining ownership of an
improved residence with the assistance of their local authority a non-governmental
Page | 61
organisation (NGO) or perhaps a cluster of professions who could provide support and
administrative assistance as their Housing Support Organisation (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing was introduced in 1995 and was essentially a
variant of the project-linked subsidy provided to non-profit institutions independent of
government and registered as legally approved entities Households earning less than
R3500 per month would be provided through this subsidy with subsidised rental housing
by these entities In 1995 when the subsidy was introduced it carried a once-off capital
grant of R16 000 per dwelling but by 2002 the amount had increased to R27 000 as part of
the governmentrsquos aspiration to promote medium density housing Pienaar and Cloete
(2005) note that because the hostel redevelopment programme had been in limbo for
several years at the time of their study the Institutional Subsidy approach had been
considered as a viable alternative to accelerate hostel conversion projects The tenure
options under this subsidy it was proposed would include
Rental
Co-operative ownership
An instalment sale option in the form of a lsquorent to buyrsquo practice with a
minimum rental period of four years to qualify for the conversion to ownership
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Under the National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
the National Housing Code (for subsidised housing) delineates subsidised housing as
Permanent residential structures that have security of tenure both internal
and external privacy
Housing that has portable water serviced with adequate energy and sanitary
facilities
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing were set
to give effect to the objectives of the Housing Act 1997 which came into effect on 1 April
Page | 62
1998 To ensure quality and durable housing products that complied with particular
minimum standards (National Housing Report 2009) For instance dwellings had to have
a minimum gross floor area of 30m2 but this has since been amended (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005)
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country
Some international interest has been generated to consider intervention in hostels and
efforts to redevelopingconverting hostels The point of this section is to illustrate that
hostels occupied and in some respect have continued to occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are one of many representations of
the physical manifestation of three centuries of systematic racial discrimination and
economic exploitation (Thurman 1997) The consolidation of the migrant labour system
through hostels the poor living conditions of hostels the dishonour of hostel life and the
control they exert on the African populace Saw hostels gaining the attention of a
number of international agencies and authorities who put resources towards and took an
interest in reconfiguring the disposition of hostels (Dyiki interview 2015)
In the period between August 2002 and April 2003 the USAID (United States Agency for
International Development) extended its support to community based approaches to
housing in South Africa and in turn created a platform where it would have input(s) into
South Africarsquos national housing policy (Urban Sector Network 2003)
Hostel redevelopment was supported under a grant provision provided by the USAID this
had two main objectives The first was that policy and information dissemination should
serve as key objectives and secondly that USAID would have a voice in the facilitation of
hostel redevelopments Initially the grant was meant to run from 23 August 2000 to 30
August 2002 but an extension was requested and the grant extended for the period 1
September 2002 to 30 April 2003 (Urban Sector Network 2003) Additionally the on-goings
of the programme instituted under the grant were to include the following activities
Identifying and conducting research into tenure options and feasible
management models for hostels
Identifying possible needs and challenges and to then conduct nation-wide
research in the hostel sector
Facilitating workshops and consolidating policy submissions and to submit
research papers to the Department of Housing
Page | 63
To publish research papers
To conduct mid-term and final evaluation of the programme
Conducting information outreaches where the USN (Urban Sector Network) would
play an essential role in informing government the private sector as well as
communities about the opportunities which could be created through the
redevelopment of hostels (Urban Sector Network2003)
The Urban Sector Network (USN) then proceeded to make specific recommendations on
the hostel redevelopment approach The USN called for the broadening on the scope of
the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme to include all hostels (private and
grey sector) and not just public sector hostel Recommendations were made that the
norms and standards for the redeveloped hostels should be developed along with
national guidelines for the management of redeveloped hostels by local authorities They
advocated for stronger support for co-operative housing The redevelopment of hostels
to be approached in an integrated and holistic manner and hostels should not be
redeveloped in an isolated manner The subsidy amount for hostels redevelopment and
social facilitation needed to be increased Lastly that hostels redevelopment should
support livelihood strategies and capacity building and training of hostel residents during
the redevelopment process was essential (Urban Sector Network 2003)
The USN proposed a departure from the public sector hostel redevelopment bias of the
Hostel Redevelopment plan (Urban Sector Network 2003)
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme (HRP)
In principal the Hostel Redevelopment Programme supported an unambiguous bias in
favour of public sector hostels (Dyiki 2006) Public sector hostels are those hostels
owned by either provincial or local authorities that offered accommodation to workers
from a range of industries (Thurman 1997) Grey sector hostels (in which the structures
wereare owned by private companies but the land by a provincial or local authority
and private sector hostels) did not form part of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme
(Dyiki 2006) The biggest limitation and challenge of the HRP was in its narrow focus on
solely the conversion of hostels beds (Thurman 1997) The aim of the HRP was to provide
a subsidy allocation that was based per bed but it was criticised as being impractical
and unfeasible and not adequately addressing the issue of housing provision (Dyiki
2006) Dyiki interview (2015) believes that the challenge of the HRP was that it was not
talking to individuals but rather it was a subsidy given to the state to improve the hostel
and the standard of living in the hostel Since most of the public sector hostels were
Page | 64
managed by the municipalities the municipalities received the subsidy and the
residents of the hostels therefore had very little say in how the subsidy could in effect be
used The other challenge was that grey sector and public sector hostels were not part
of the subsidy (Dyiki interview 2015)
The Hostel Redevelopment Programme was perhaps the earliest strategy conceived by
the South African government as a national policy aiming to
Promote habitable and humane conditions in hostel conversions
Ensure the involvement of hostel residents the surroundingneighbouring
community and relevant (publicprivate) authorities and any other entity
affected by the project are involved in the decision-making processes
Facilitate and promote social integration within hostel communities and the
hostels and adjacent communities
Put measures in place to accommodate any persons displaced by the hostel
conversion project
Empower promote economic development and seeks to be development-
oriented
According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment
Programme was largely based on the premise that this programme would make some
provisions for grant funding from the central government towards the conversion or
upgrading of hostels particularly public sector or grey-sector hostels This will be done with
the broad aim of the programme to facilitate and create living conditions for residents
that are humane and hygienic by providing prospects for housing options that are
affordable and sustainable With tenure options for
Rental
Possible ownership for those at the lower income scale
Upon its conception a capital subsidy of R16 000 was initially proposed per family or R4
000 per individual Additionally to be eligible for this programme hostel redevelopment
programmes would need to be
Planned and implemented in a participative and comprehensive manner
with the requirement that interest groups would need to be established
Based on socio-economic studies undertaken to determine and consider the
needs and affordability aspect of those who would be affected (ie stand to
benefit from the project)
Page | 65
Unfailing in ensuring that there is no displacement of residents unless
alternative accommodation is provided
Sustainable with regards to the on-going payments of maintenance and any
other related costs
Purposeful to augment employment opportunities for the hostel residents as
well as the locals in the construction and on-going maintenance of the
project
The broad aim of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme (Mdunyelwa 2015) was to
convert these historically male-occupied spaces which were also subsequently meant
for migrant labourers to family units But it will be done in such a way to able and
capacitate the accommodation of the families of these men In some way but perhaps
not explicitly stated in the Hostel Redevelopment Programme policy brief there is an
element of urbanisation that is implied Therefore it was an attempt to somewhat
encourage the men to relocate their families from their rural home-base (Mdunyelwa
2015)
The shortcomings of the HRP in how it had a restricted focus on hostel beds and
somewhat of an oversight on the complexity of the configuration of hostels saw it being
replaced by the Community Residential Units Programme (CRU) (Pienaar 2010) Dyiki
interview (2015) in my interview with him argued that the CRU Programme unlike the HRP
contains a lot more detail that was perhaps missed in the HRP He further suggested that
the CRU Programme could be considered somewhat of a lsquocost recoveryrsquo strategy by
government to recoup some of the monies spent on these projects As the CRU
programme has a strong rental housing stock component to it (Dyiki interview 2015)
44 The Community Residential Units Programme (CRU Programme)
The Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme has since replaced the National
Hostel Redevelopment Programme At the time of this study there are approximately
2000 public hostels across the country with a vast majority of them still needing to be
afforded some attention and measures to redevelop them (Demacon 2014) According
to the Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the CRU Programme (2006)
the CRU Programme aims to facilitate the provision of secure and stable rental tenure for
lower income persons Furthermore stating that the programme seeks to provide a
framework for addressing the many and varied forms of existing public sector residential
accommodation as the previous approach under the HRP only considered a ldquoper-bedrdquo
Page | 66
approach that proved unfavourable on a number of occasions (CRU Programme Policy
Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme is believed to provide a lsquobetterrsquo suited programme and a coherent
framework to assist in dealing with a vast range of public stock which has for the most
part been indecisively and incomprehensively dealt with (Demacon 2014) The CRU
Programme targets low income individuals as well as households with an average R 3500
monthly income and who have not been able to find suitable accommodation
According to the CRU Programme in the years leading up to 2006 there was an
approximate 4512 of households nationally which fall within the R0-R800 income groups
currently renting and an approximate 4027 falling within the R801 ndash R3200 income
groups (CRU Programme Policy Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme intends to cover the following areas
a) Public hostels that are owned by Provincial Housing Departments and municipalities
b) ldquoGreyrdquo hostels which are hostel that have both a public and private ownership
component due to historical reasons
c) Public housing stock that forms part of the ldquoEnhanced Extended Discount Benefit
Schemerdquo but which cannot be transferred to individual ownership and has to be
managed as rental accommodation by the public owner
d) Post-1994 newly developed public residential accommodation owned by provincial
housing departments and municipalities
e) Existing dysfunctional abandoned andor distressed buildings in inner city or township
areas that have been taken over by a municipality and funded by housing funds
(Department of Human Settlements 2015)
The CRU programme policy document is quite a laborious document In general the CRU
programme seeks to promote and advance the provision of rental options for lower
income groups facilitate communication and participation of residents throughout the
process provide a variety of rental stock and provide secure and stable rental stock This
will be done by what the CRU Programme articulates as providing a realistic funding
programme (Department of Human Settlements 2015)
According to the CRU programme rental stock provided by the programme is to be
owned by either a provincial housing department or a municipality However this has
been a seriously contested position on the part of the individuals and households
affected by the programme who want home ownership (Dyiki interview 2015)
Page | 67
45 Conclusion
There have been a number of projects over the past several years which have in part
articulated the states aspiration to reconfigure the lsquoway of lifersquo in hostels The Hostel
Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units Programme are
considered to have been the leading approaches to reconfiguring hostels within the
countryrsquos broader landscape Whether hostels have or do not have a place in
democratic South Africa is part of what this study is looking to explore
Chapter five introduces the Sethokga hostel conversion project and in principal seeks to
unpack the conceptualisation of the project while reflecting on the findings of the
interviews
Page | 68
The Sethokga hostel conversion project
5 Introduction
Chapter five will examine the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seek to unpack
how the project has been conceptualised Discussing the main components of the
project its main stakeholders the project phases exploring what are its defining
characteristics the broad vision and aim of the project how the project has understood
the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn set to address them and then also
in what way(s) the residents of the hostel have been involved in the project Furthermore
this chapter will examine what the project considers important in terms of gender issues
what have been some limitations of the project while it also considers what the
anticipated impact and benefit of the project is
Lastly and in view of the interviews that were conducted chapter five discusses how the
residents of the hostel and the community of Tembisa and greater Ekurhuleni will know
that the project has been completed and has been successful By and large this chapter
offers testament of the findings from the field work and reviews the rationale of the
Sethokga conversion project To conclude this chapter a collage of diagrams and
images will be presented to provide the reader with greater insight(s) into the Sethokga
hostel conversion project
51 Outline of the main components of the project
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project
There have been a number of stakeholders involved in the Sethokga hostel conversion
project the main stakeholders include
o The Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement (GPDHS)
o LTE Consulting
o The Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
o The ward councillor and various community committees and leaders
o The Sethokga Hostel residents
o The community of Tembisa
Page | 69
The roles of the stakeholders are summarised as follows National government is the key
funder of the Sethokga hostel conversion project the funds are transferred to the GPDHS
who have to then ensure that the costs of the project are managed LTE Consulting is a
consulting company appointed by the GPDHS for the oversight and construction of the
Sethokga hostel conversion project They work in collaboration with the EMM (the local
authority) and its various departments such as the services department the energy
department quality assurance etc However the GPDHS remains the lsquomain decision-
makerrsquo and lsquocustodianrsquo of the project with the lead oversight on the budget and
programmeproject management The project manager Mr Sisa Majikijela is the official
from the GPDHS that is directly responsible for supervision and coordination of the
project The ward councillor and the various community committees leaders facilitate
avenues of communication and engagement between the officials (from province the
EMM and LTE) with the residents of Sethokga and community lsquoAs the eyes and ears on
the groundrsquo (Majikijela interview 2015) ideally the ward councillor and various
community committees leaders have an important role to play in ensuring that the
Sethokga residents and community will be the rightful recipients of the project The
Sethokga hostel residents and broader community have a vested interest in the project
because it stands to affect andor benefit them (Sololo interview2015)
Once the project is completed with the family units fully constructed (ie with furnishings
such as trees plants parking bays and so forth) and the services installed The project will
be handed over to the EMM for on-going administration maintenance and the
collection of rentals (Shibambo interview 2015) The Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlement in collaboration with the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and LTE
Consulting play a key role as facilitates of the conversion of Sethokga hostel into family
units (Majikijela interview 2015)
522 Project phases
The data regarding the project phases was easily accessible and generously provided by
the consulting resident engineer and the architect providing me with a market analysis
study and a few other key documents The development concept of the hostel
conversion project divides the project into three phases and further subdivides each of
the phases into two phases phases A and B (Demacon 2014)
Initial studies (ie pre-feasibility studies) were done in 2008 but the demolition of the first
four blocks of the hostel demolished for the current phase 1A only took place in August of
2011 and it was anticipated that phase 1A would be completed and handed over to the
Page | 70
municipality by the end of 2014 but this did not happen (Majikijela interview 2015) At the
time of conducting fieldwork between the months of August and September 2015 it was
said that phase 1A was near completion with just the landscaping parking and water
provision left to completed (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
Phase 1A of the project was meant to bring to completion a total of 240 units
accommodating 1 194 people to provide 69 parking bays (one per four units) a total of
54 one bedroom units 117 two bedroom units and 69 three bedroom units at an average
unit size of 324m2 477m2 and 588m2 for the one two and three bedrooms respectively
(Demacon 2014) However only a total of 222 units have been built and this shortfall was
largely attributed to the underlying dolomite geological conditions of the site (Bako and
Shibambo interview 2015)
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
The Sethokga hostel conversion project has been administered under the CRU
programme and forms part of a national agenda to convert hostels into family units
(Dyiki interview 2015) The target group under the CRU programme is individuals and
households earning between R800 and R3 500 per month who are able to enter what the
CRU programme has termed the lsquoformal private rental and social housing marketrsquo
(Demacon 2014)
The new residential units (the family units) are situated on ervan 128 and 5729 of the
Sethokga complex within the administrative jurisdiction of the Kempton Park Customer
Care Area (CCA) which is the administrative body conducting oversight of development
and town planning affairs for the Tembisa and Kempton Park areas (Demacon 2014)
The family units are three storey walk-ups and appear somewhat spacious and far more
appealing than the hostel structures The CRU proposes that bachelorsone bedroom
units of 20m2 to 35m2 should be allocated at a monthly rental of R270 ndash R450 a two
bedroom unit of 35m2-45m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R450 to R850 and
that a three bedroom unit of 45m2-80m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R850 ndash
R1650 Rentals have been and remain a contestation in a number of hostel conversion
projects across the country and Sethokga is no different According to the economic
representative for the ward Sololo interview (2015) the residents of Sethokga hostel are
contesting that they want to pay R150 for a one bedroom unit R200 for a two bedroom
unit and R300 for a three bedroom unit
According to the principles of the CRU programme the ownership of the rental housing
stock is to be reserved by either the Gauteng Provincial Department of Human
Page | 71
Settlement (GPDHS) or the EMM The ownership of the family units can be transferred by
the GPDHS to the EMM in line with the Housing Act no right(s) of ownership can be
transferred to tenants (Pienaar 2010)
The process of the Sethokga hostel conversion has on an administrative and government
support level been facilitated through a grant allocation from national government to
province (GPDHS) This grant has made provisions for pre-feasibility studies
socialcommunity facilitation the relocationreallocation of some residents (within the
hostel or to alternative sites to make way for demolition and construction of phase 1A)
and the consideration and compensation of construction costs and professional fees
(Majikijela interview 2015) The allocation of the units determining rental structures
applying indigent relief measures where necessary rental collection and maintenance
as well as the management of the family units are factors determined by the GPDHS and
the EMM cooperatively (Sololo interview 2015) The hostel residents are then at some
level consulted and lsquoencouragedrsquo to participate in this regard (Dyiki interview 2015)
Seemingly throughout project implementation the stakeholders have been kept informed
of the status and progress of the project With respect to notifying the hostel residents and
general public notices are placed in and around the hostel to inform them of meetings
and the ward councillorrsquos office take the lead on this (Mthethwa interview 2015)
There have been a number of communitypublic meetings that have taken place as the
project has progressed From the fieldwork I was not able to draw on precisely how many
meetings had taken place since or precisely when the meetings took place or what was
discussed in each of those meetings Generally the ward councillor said at least once a
month a consultative and progress report meeting would take place between the
various stakeholders where officials would engage the hostel residents and general
public
According to Majikijela interview (2015) the ward councillor and the economic rep the
main area of involvement on the part of the hostel residents has been in providing
labour A small percentage of the residents have been involved in the construction-work
and some of the clerical work on the project Their involvement in discussions on the
project is said to often be arbitrarily halted by political interference (Sololo interview
2015) For instance Bako interview (2015) the architect recalled that on the design of the
family units Liefa Architects did not talk to the end user ie the residents to ask them
what they wanted Instead a design which was informed by other examples of similar
projects was presented to the residents of Sethokga and the general public (Bako
interview 2015) ldquoThe design of the hostel was not lsquoexclusiversquo to Sethokga and its contextrdquo
(Bako interview 2015)
Page | 72
In relation to the size of the hostel and its residents only a very small percentage of the
hostel residents have been employed in the project the December 2013 January 2014
labour records reported the following
Table 1
Total workforce 66
Females 7
Males 59
Youth 28
Adults 38
Semi-skilled 20
Skilled 22
Disabled 0
General workers 24
Source LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor report
I was fortunate to have attended one of the community meetings that were held at an
old community hall within the vicinity of the hostel This meeting took place on a
Saturday the 15th of August 2015 and it was quite the experience There was a relatively
strong police presence at the meeting The police kept watch and managed the
activities inside and outside the community hall As there were concerns that the
proceedings might get out of hand and a possible tussle between those in attendance
might arise The meeting was chaired by the ward councillor and aside from the residents
of Sethokga in attendance was one official from the GPDHS an official from the EMM
community leaders and ANC committee members
There was an obvious and overwhelming male presence in the meeting tempers ran
high and there was an observable resistance from the residents of Sethokga to the
presence of the three females in the meeting This included me and two female
committee members Several times the meeting was disrupted by shouts and echoes of
discontentment questioning what women were doing at a meeting for men lsquordquothey have
no place here they do not even live hererdquo were the words of some of the men Our
presence seemed to really infuriate some of the men This was similar to what Ramphele
(1993) Segal (1991) Thurman (1997) and Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) observed in
their work and suggested that even now and within the context of Sethokga that the
men in the hostel are still quite at odds with having women as a part of their lsquogathering of
Page | 73
menrsquo and possibly even living among them The demeanour of some of the men in this
meeting suggested that they found the presence and role of women in these meetings
unneeded It was evident that these men had become far too accustomed to living
lsquoalonersquo as men Ramphele (1993) noted that the idea of an unambiguous constant and
unrestricted presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a serious point
of contention for some of men Some men expressed unwillingness while others a
struggle to comprehend or endorse this change that seemed overly unfamiliar and
challenging to come to grips with (Ramphele 1993) From my observation in this meeting
the same seems to hold true for Sethokga
The purpose of the meeting was to consult the hostel residents who were identified to be
the first recipients beneficiaries of the allocating of family units to consult them on issues
of final rental proposals allocation processes and status of the project The invitation for
this meeting was apparently only extended to those particular individuals but
subsequently the meeting was taken over by those who had objections to the process of
allocation rentals and why the meeting sought to exclude them and divide the residents
Generally the meeting was unruly and the ward councillor as well as the community
leaders and committee members struggled to manage the crowd and the rampant
tempers in the room
The agenda for the meeting is provided below to provide the reader with some context
and outline of the intension of the meeting Unfortunately tempers ran especially high in
this meeting and in my opinion none of the items on the agenda were successfully
addressed
Page | 74
Figure 8 August 15 community meeting agenda
Source Sethokga Community meeting 2015
521 Broad vision and aim of the project
The vision and aim of the project was described by the key informants who to some
extent unanimously used the following key words integration sustainability community
participation to improve peoplersquos lives restoring honour addressing the ills of hostel life
and bringing families into a safe and secure environment The housing officer for me
captured well the overall sentiments of the key informants when he said ldquowe are
surrounded and have so many companies in Tembisa so clearly you will find letrsquos say a
white guy working in the area but then they travel to Kempton Park or some other area
outside Tembisa and that is where they live So it would be nice to see him living in
Sethokga The project is about integration and not just integrating the residents of
Page | 75
Sethokga to the rest of the township but other ways of integration like racial integration
That is what I want to seerdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015)
Additionally the broad vision and aim of the hostel conversion project is to instil a culture
of payment into not just the hostel but the broader community ldquoPeople cannot just keep
wanting everything for free government cannot afford itrdquo The interviewees that
expressed this position were Majikijela Sololo Mthethwa Dyiki Bako and Shibambo
Seemingly under the CRU programme the project would seek to influence and instil this
culture of payment through the rental housing stock focus of the programme That
largely seeks to promote government owned and managed rental housing stock a
departure from the lsquofreersquo housing approach (Bako interview 2015)
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga development
Source Liefa Architects 2015
Phase 1B Phase 2B Phase 3B
Phase 1A Phase 2A
Phase 3A
Page | 76
What was surprising to me was that the family units are not intended to be occupied by
current residents only The idea is that some of the current residents would live elsewhere
and when this question was posed to the official from the GPDHS Majikijelarsquos interview
(2015) response was that the hostel residents who did not qualify in terms of the required
criteria for the renting of the units would be allocated RDPs in the neighbouring area of
Esselen Park but he could not provide clarity as to how and when this would happen
The vision of Sethokga that can be seen from the plan provided below is a reconfigured
locality Rehabilitated single-sex compounds into self contained family units furnished
with child care facilities park(s) garden(s) a community centre recreation facilities and
parking areas
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn
set out to address those needs and challenges
Although the CRU Programme only sets particular administrative operational and
project facilitation guidelines Arguably these guidelines do in some respect address
a number of the ills associated with hostels such as the issue of overcrowding lack of
privacy and poor living conditions (Pienaar 2010) Within Sethokga there are
challenges of tribalism high prevalence of HIV drug abuse alcohol abuse
criminality overcrowding lack of privacy possible health hazards a lack of ablution
facilities The hostel being unsafe for women (especially those who are staying in the
hostel illegally) was identified and shared by the key informants as some of the major
challenges confronting the hostel This view was shared by the ward councillor the
housing officer from the EMM the project manager from the GPDHS the consulting
engineer and the wardrsquos economic representative
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi the issue of tribalism occurred
as a result of what he recalls as a defining political shift ldquoafter the release of Mandela
and when they started preaching lsquothis thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions
happened according to who was Zulu or Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Here the ward councillor explains what he saw as
some of the factors that led to what is currently the strong predominance of Pedi and
Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel suggesting that
ldquoThey were mixed here when they started talking about negotiations that
there must be elections and then the IFP (Inkatha Freedom Party) was
rejecting that and that had nothing to do with membership it was a situation
of the warlords the Zulursquos terrorizing the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa
Page | 77
and standing with the white man The Zulursquos did not like that so that is where
the Zulu and Xhosa divide started and that is when you found that in
Sethokga it became predominantly more Xhosa there was fighting and war
the Zulursquos were chasing people out of their territory at the other hostels The
Xhosarsquos ran to Sethokga There was fighting everywhere even here in
Sethokga and all over the Pedis Vendas Tsongarsquos they all ran away from
those hostels where they were being chased out and they came hererdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
It was unclear as to the extent to which the project dealt with any of these
challenges and how or if they were factored into the project The project seems to
have a general lsquobest practicersquo approach to hostel conversion irrespective of the
circumstance of a particular hostel
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project
ldquoThe political volatility of the project poses an enormous threat to the successful
allocationletting of the family unitsrdquo (Majikijela interview 2015) On the part of the
key informants their continued inability to answer the perhaps not so simple question
of what would happen to those who could not afford the monthly rental of the family
units This suggested that the issue of rentals has remained a grey area even as the
project heads towards project completion ldquoWe will worry about that when we get
thererdquo was the brisk response to my inquiry on this matter Similar to what was
observed by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in the City Deep Redevelopment
project Sethokga faces a similar challenge
Certainly public community participation in any context is a complex and at times a
contentious exercise (Mdunyelwa 2015) I remain hesitant whether the Sethokga
hostel conversion project has been able to lsquotrulyrsquo engage residents and the broader
community in a transparent and reciprocal manner Seemingly affordability will be
the determining factor of who will be able to rent a unit To those who cannot afford
it stands to be seen what remedy will be extended to them
Moreover the following factors were cited as some of the limitations of the project
the lack of transparency political interference an inadequate dissemination of
information to residentscommunity and the projects failure to respond to what the
solution(s) will be for lsquonon-qualifyingrsquo residents who cannot afford the monthly rentals
Page | 78
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful
I wanted to find out from the key informants particularly those who have been
directly involved in the conversion project what for them would constitute a
successful project and how from their point of view the residents and the greater
community would know that the project is completed and has been
successfulunsuccessful Overall the leading response was that a project would be
successful when the family units are occupied Some of the interviewees added that
the process of allocating the units and resolving the myriad of issues are most
certainly likely to cause further delays and will require intricate resolution (ie peoplersquos
unwillingness and otherrsquos inability to pay tension and opposition to paying rentals
opening the letting to tenants who are not hostel residents and so forth)
In summary the thoughts shared by the housing office at the EMM and the wardrsquos
economic representative capture in essence the general position held by every one
of the key informants
ldquoFor me a complete project will be the units functioning on their own and then
people will be told during a public meeting We also need to involve the mayor the
MECs and the media People will be told that it is finished and this is what is going to
happenrdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015) ldquoAfter it has been completed I want to see 80
percent of the people who have been staying in the hostel still residing in the hostel
It must not just be open to whomever There are people as far as Johannesburg who
want to stay here because they see it being comfortable and nice forgetting we are
looking to improve the lives of the current hostel dwellers There are even those in the
township who think that people of the hostel cannot pay so this is not for themrdquo
(Sololo interview 2015)
Page | 79
53 Visual narrative of the family units
531 Architectural designsplans
The design of the family units is what the architect referred to as a multi-storey approach
ldquoThe three storey walk-ups address the need for housing much better than an RDP wouldrdquo
(Bako interview 2015) They have an urban apartment-like feel about them but the
mundane (uniform) paintwork gives them a distinct government provided social housing feel
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development plan
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 80
Figure 12 Architects Section E - E
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 11 Architects Section F ndash F
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 13 South Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 81
Figure 14 North Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 15 East Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 16 West Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 82
532 The project site of family units
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site
View of the site of the family units from one of
the hostel blocks situated adjacent to the
construction site across the street
Construction of the family units
commenced in August of 2011
Site notice placed at the entrance of the
family units construction site
The Sethokga community hall situated at
the entrance to the family units
construction site and adjacent to the
council offices
Page | 83
For the most partthe construction of the
family units is nearing completetion
Walking through the site personally I felt that
the family units had a somewhat prominent
RDP lsquolookrsquo about them
Ground floor view
The entrance into the construction site of the
family units and the site office which is
situtated within the vicinity of the site
Page | 84
533 Inside the Family units
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units
Doorway into one of the three bedroom
family units which leads into an open plan
dining and kitchen area
Each unit has its own dining sitting and
kitchen area
The construction site is lsquopolicedrsquo by the Red
Ants (a private security company)around the
clock and also a private security company
Some of the security members seen on site
they insisted I take a picture of them to
include in this study
Page | 85
Built-in sink and geyser
The family
units offer a number of distinct qualities that
the hostel clearly does not have which
include privacy and a dignified living
environmentspace
Each unit has its bathroom with a built-in
toilet bath and shower
Shower
Separate and additional toilet as part of the
three bedroom family units
The diningsitting area and two adjacent
bedrooms
Page | 86
The site of the family units is being guarded by a private security company and members
of the Red Ants (a private security company) When asked about this the official (the
project manager overseeing the Sethokga hostel conversion project) from the GPDHS
said that this was necessary to ensure that no unauthorised occupations take place This
was also to guard against any possible vandalism or the looting of materialsequipment
or the site office (Majikijela interview 2015)
54 Summary of main themes and findings
This study had a number of themes which resonate with the case study The localised
context of Sethokga hostel offered great insights into the current state of hostels as
spaces and places that still largely exist within a context of volatility poor living conditions
and complex socio-economic challenges (Thurman 1997) The historic exploits on hostels
revealed and I suppose confirmed that the hostel system was established supported and
perpetuated by methodical policy and controls to discourage the permanent settlement
of Africans in urban areas or any intention of relocating their family to urban areas (Segal
1991) Furthermore within the contemporary South African context this has posed a
number of challenges and has been a longstanding reality of a number of hostel dwellers
as observed in the work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010)
The view from one of the family units (a ground
floor three bedroom unit) is onto the ward
councillorrsquos offices and the hostel in the
distance
One of the three bedrooms in the family
units
Page | 87
Sethokga hostel is also one of many hostels that exist within a historically-laden context
The strong prominence of Pedi and Xhosa native speaking men in some respect also
speaks to the events of circular migration that are still a lived-reality of the men of
Sethokga This according to the ward councillor has meant that the men have had to
maintain ties with their families in the Eastern Cape and Limpopo while most of them live
in Sethokga away from their families (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) In terms of gender
issues the aspect of men and housing the hostel conversion project does not adopt a
particular stand on this Seemingly the project makes no effort to appreciate the
apparent rural location of the wives partners children and families of a vast majority of
the men in Sethokga The idea is that anyone who is able to afford the monthly rental of
the family units can sign a lease agreement and rent a unit However this presents a
number of issues and leaves a lot unaccounted for and unanswered ie will the families
of the men in the hostels make a transition to join them in the family units Is this even a
possibility for them what impact would this have on the already stretched social
amenities in the area Arguably in the case of Sethokga this oversight has been a serious
area of contention and has amplified the political volatility of the project
The heavy-handedness of the hostel system cunningly imposed a sense of no escape
yet quite interestingly the later unwillingness to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have their
hostel converted into family units (Thurman 1997)
Among the key findings of the research report is that the lsquorental onlyrsquo tenure option and
approach to the hostel conversion project was the biggest challenge and one of the
most critical points of contention (Pienaar 2010) On the one hand the hostel residents
are arguing that they cannot afford the proposed rentals while on the other hand
officials are of the opinion that this is in fact untrue and not wholly representative of the
attitude(s) of all the hostel residents Thus a supposed unwillingness to pay and a culture
of entitlement was cited by the key informants as the underlying state of affairs and one
that posed the biggest threat to the project and in particular how the family units would
be allocated
Although the project is for the most part about converting Sethokga hostel into family
units in principal it is also about redress integration improving the living conditions of
Sethokga residents reconfiguring the mental and physical landscape of hostels in
contemporary South Africa and introducing children and women into the hostel
Integration was repeatedly cited by the key informants as the main imperative of the
study Political interference and the very particular sensitivities around political allegiance
Page | 88
(keeping in the mind the local elections are fast approaching) are factors that were
cited would cause the greatest difficulty in the allocation of the family units
54 Conclusion
Undoubtedly the Sethokga hostel conversion project has a number of components and
features to it that are complex in part ambiguous and would require further and more
detailed study Seemingly the CRU programme is a lsquodeparturersquo from the Hostel
Redevelopment Programme In part it offers prospects to facilitate the provision of
affordable rental tenure for those earning below R3500 while seeking to promote the
integration of publicsocial housing into the broader housing market Under the
administration of the CRU programme one of the leading aims is to facilitate the creation
of sustainable public housing assets (Pienaar 2010) However the CRU programme has
been criticised as a framework that is largely operating in a policy environment that is
hostile elaborate and not speaking to the needs of the people on the ground
Furthermore many see it as solely a hostel upgrading policy viewed often to be done
impromptu in response to local pressures (Pienaar 2010) To paraphrase Pienaar (2010)
the vagueness regarding the roles and responsibilities of the respective provincial
department of human settlement and municipalities has not provided much confidence
in hostel conversion projects
Chapter five has examined the Sethokga hostel conversion project and attempted to
unpack how the project has been conceptualised This chapter has identified and
outlined the main components of the project its main stakeholders and what has been
their role in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Discussed were the project phases a
number of critical elements such as how the project has understood the needs and
challenges of the hostel residents In addition to this chapter five outlined the way(s) in
which the residents have been involved in the project if the project considered anything
important in terms of gender issues and if what have these been factored into the
project By and large chapter five drew extensively on the findings of the fieldwork and
made an effort to narrate some of the insights and perspectives shared by the key
informants To conclude the chapter a collage of diagrams and images were presented
to offer the reader a visual narrative of the site of the family units
Page | 89
Concluding chapter
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoWhat does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
61 Review and reflections
This research report consisted of six chapters chapter one introduced the study
chapter two provided the theoretical backdrop of the study chapter three
introduced the study area (Sethokga hostel) chapter four discussed the evolution of
hostel redevelopment conversion and what has been the states approach to hostel
conversion and chapter five examined the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project
In chapter one the main point of discussion was the research question outlining the
aim and objectives of the study and the research methodology
Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project been conceptualised
in how the project has been conceptualised does it address the stigma of hostel life
and it what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What informed the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail what is the broad aim and vision
of the project what is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
Page | 90
In chapter one it was also argued that this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects had somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore that there needed to be more inquiry and
study conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel
conversion projects
The studyrsquos theoretical backdrop was discussed in chapter two The aim of this was to
contextualise the term hostels as to clearly illustrate what is meant by it In addition
to drawing on particular strands of literature concepts ideas and arguments that
resonated with the study Chapter two argued that the historically the landscape of
hostels has by and large been complex at times perplexing and highly contentious
Chapter three introduced Sethokga hostel It elaborated on the locality of the hostel
and its local as well as municipal context A visual narrative of the hostel was also
provided and this captured the current state of the hostel and the conditions in which
its residents endure It was established that ironically the conditions in the hostel are
not much different to many of the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg
The hostel was badly designed poorly built and is suffering years of neglect it is in
appalling and overcrowded condition
Chapter four described the evolution of hostel redevelopment conversion in the
country and what has been the states approach to hostel conversion post-1994 This
chapter discussed in some detail the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme Arguing that these programmes have to
date been the lsquoforerunnersrsquo of the statersquos approach to addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo
While in chapter five the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
was examined Chapter five was the crux of this research report The discussions in the
chapters before it set up the groundwork for a critical exploration of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project and for unpacking the research question
Chapter six concludes this study and seeks to answer the question ldquoso what does this
mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo Since this
report was conducted as part of the requirements for the partial fulfilment of an
Urban and Regional Planning honours qualification It is important to address the ldquoso
what for plannersrsquo question and the value that this report stands to offer to the
Page | 91
planning profession Firstly let us reflect on what have been some of the limitations of
the study
62 Limitations of the study
For the most part this study had a wealth of information and sources to draw from
The insights and wisdom provided by the key informants were invaluable their
willingness and enthusiasm to participate in this study was not something I had
anticipated but I remain truly grateful
Due to certain constraints more especially time constraints and the particular scope
focus of the research report this posed some limitations to the study In only
interviewing and engaging with officials and not with the residents of Sethokga the
voices opinions and views of the officials told only one side of a many-sided story
How the project affects and has affected the residents Is this something they want
support and for those who do not what are some of their reasons for contention Is
circular migration still as prominent a feature within the current context of Sethokga
What is the present-day nature of household configurations in the hostels (is the duty
of the older men still to order the actions of the younger men ie the cleaning and up
keeping of the communal area and other household duties) what for the residents
of Sethokga would constitute a successful project
Even as this study concludes the side of the hostel residents remains largely untold
and unreported Furthermore the supposed apathy on the part of the hostel residents
and the views expressed by the key informants that family units offer the most ideal
and best alternative to the residents of Sethokga could not be explored and
interrogated further given the limitations of the scope of the study
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners
Within contemporary South Africa there have certainly been a vast number of
conflicting views held regarding what should be the role and future of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Although academics policy makers bureaucrats developers and
the general public have usually been unable to reach longstanding middle-ground
on what should be done about hostels One of the more widely held views is that
hostels certainly present a real challenge but also an opportunity For government
Page | 92
developers non-government organisations (NGOs) built environment practitioners
and needless to say the residents of hostels themselves (Thurman 1997)
Planners are frequently cast in the role of performing a balancing act (Campbell
2006) As a result the adaptability of the planning profession as a coherent and
impartial discipline has over the years become rather topical subjects (Campbell
2006) This has inevitably continued to require new and innovative ways of lsquoseeingrsquo
lsquocomprehendingrsquo and lsquodoingrsquo things in order to shape and re-shape an inherently
divergent and historic-laden urban landscape (Jupp and Inch 2012) In the midst of
the shifts in the traditional conception and role of the planning profession as a merely
procedural and administrative activity (Harrison and Kahn 2002) planning is still to a
great extent closely tied to government structures (Cornwall 2002) Therefore within
this particular context of government driven intervention urban planning
professionals stand to be instrumental facilitators of development and offer essential
expertise and tools towards addressing some of the challenges within our urban
landscape (Albert and Kramsch 1999)
This study observed a range of intertwined urban dynamics ie around housing socio-
economic distress a wavering political climate and the need to be more
environmentally conscientious This necessitates focused attention and much
consideration as the political economic social and environmental junctures in which
planning has come to operate has meant that the profession has become
susceptible to external pressures scrutiny and influence (Campbell and Marshall
2002)
64 Conclusion
South Africa has for a number of years into democracy been at a critical time of
limited housing supply and a desperate need for housing (Khan and Thurman 2001)
(Pienaar
2010) Planners have an important role to play in facilitating coordinating and
effecting the reconfiguration of the urban landscape towards improving the setting
of inherently socio-economically ailing spaces such as hostels (Jupp and Inch 2012)
Hostels have largely remained as spaces that have continued to perpetuate
underdevelopment inequality and disempowerment (Khan and Thurman 2001) If
family units are to wholly address the stigma of hostel life and the convoluted nature
Page | 93
of hostels to alter the landscape of hostels and define a novel future for hostels and
their residents It is certain that this will require decisive action collaborative efforts
and the wisdom of retrospection
Page | 94
List of references
African National Congress 1994 The Reconstruction and Development Programme A
policy framework ANC Johannesburg
African National Congress (2003) Briefing note 5 Housing
httpwwwancorgzaelections2004briefingshousingpdf
Albert A and Kramsch O (1999) Space Inequality and Difference lsquoRadical Turns
and lsquoCultural Termsrdquo European Planning Studies 7(1) 77 ndash 79
Bandyopadhyay S and Green E (2008) Nation-building and Conflict in Modern
Africa The Suntory Centre
Barnett C (1999) Broadcasting the Rainbow Nation Media Democracy and Nation-
building in South Africa Editorial Board of Antipode 31 (3) 274-303
Benit-Gbaffou C and Mathoho M (2010) A case study of participation in the City
Deep Hostel Redevelopment Project Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Bonner P and Nieftagodien N (2012) Ekurhuleni the making of an urban region
Wits University Press
Campbell H and Marshall R (2002) Values and professional identities in planning
practice in Allmendinger R And Tewdwr-Jones M (eds) Planning futures new
directions for planning theory London Routledge
Castles S and M J (Millerl (2008) The Age of Migration International Population
Movements in the Modern World New York The Guilford Press
Charlton S et al (2014) From Housing to Human Settlement Evolving Perspectives
South African Cities Network
Chipkin I and Meny-Gibert S (2011) Why the Past matters Histories of the Public
Service in South Africa PARI Short Essays number 1 Johannesburg PARI
Collinson M A and K Adazu (2006) The INDEPTH Network A demographic resource
on migration and urbanisation in Africa and Asia Views on Migration in Sub-Saharan
Africa Proceedings of an African Migration Alliance Workshop C Cross D
Gelderblom N Roux and J Mafukidze Cape Town HSRC Press 159- 172
Page | 95
Collinson M A (2006) Health Impacts of Social Transition A study of Female
Temporary Migration and its impact on Child Mortality in Rural South Africa A
dissertation submitted to the School of Public Health University of the Witwatersrand
in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master in Science in the branch of
Medicine
Cornwall A (2002) Making Spaces Changing Places Situating Participation in
Development Institute of Development Studies IDS Working Paper 170
Creswell J W (2009) Research Design Qualitative Quantitative and Mixed Methods
Approaches 3rd Edition Los Angeles Sage Publications Inc
Demacon 2014 Sethokga hostels mixed typology market analysis market research
Findings and recommendations
Department of Human Settlements Republic of South Africa Programmes and
Subsidies document assessed on 7 July 2015 from
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentspublicationshuman_settlement
s_programmes_and_subsidiespdf
Department of Social Development Republic of South Africa White Paper on
Families in South Africa 2012
Dyiki M (2006) City of Cape Town Integrating Families Hostels to Homes
Redevelopment Programme Presentation
httpswwwwesterncapegovzatext200652006_hostels_presentation-_dyikipdf
Fritz V and Menocal A R (2007) Understanding State-Building from a Political
Economy Perspective An Analytical and Conceptual Paper on Processes
Embedded Tensions and Lessons for International Engagement Report for DFIDrsquos
Effective and Fragile States Teams Overseas Development Institute
Greenberg S and Mathoho M (2010) ldquoConceptual Framework on Public
Participation and Developmentrdquo Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Page | 96
Grieger L et al (2013) Moving Out and Moving In Evidence of Short-Term Household
Change in South Africa from the National Income Dynamics Study
Goldblatt B amp Meintjes S (1996) Gender and the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission a submission to the TRC May
Harrison P And Kahn M (2002) The ambiguities of change the case of the planning
profession in the province of KwaZulu-Natal South Africa in Thornley A and Rydin Y
(eds) Planning in the global era Aldershot Ashgate
Jupp E and Inch A (2012) Planning as a profession in uncertain times Town Planning
Review Vol 83 No 5
Khan F and Thurman S (2001) Setting the Stage Current Housing Policy and
Debate in South Africa Isandla Institute
Liefa Consulting (2015) Maps diagrams source
LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor
report
Mapetla M M (2005) Aspects of urban housing for women and men in Southern
Africa Roma Lesotho National University of Lesotho
Marshall M N (1996) Sampling for qualitative research Family Practice Oxford
University Press
Mosoetsa S (2011) Eating from one pot the dynamics of survival in poor South
African households Johannesburg Wits University Press
Mdunyelwa M L (2015) Public Participation in Hostel Redevelopment Programs in
Nyanga and Langa Dissertation presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in
the Faculty of Arts and Social Science at Stellenbosch University
National Housing Report (2009) -
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentsnational_housing_20092_Techn
ical_General_Guidelines
Netshitenzhe J (2011) A Developmental State South Africarsquos developmental
Capacity UCT Summer School Mapungubwe Institute for Strategic Reflection
Page | 97
Peoples Housing Programme httpwwwjoburg-
archivecozacity_visionannualreport2002-03chapter10pdf
Pienaar J S and Cloete C E (2005) Hostel Conversion as Social Housing in South
Africa Funding Regime VS Real Needs Case Study of the Sethokga Hostel Conversion
Project Pacific Rim Real Estate Society (PRRES)
Pienaar J (2010) Community Residential Units key elements application implications
for Metros Municipal Leadership Housing Forum0
Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the Community Residential Units
Programme 2006
httpwwwgovzaabout-governmentgovernment-programmescommunity-
residential-unit-cru-programme
Ramphele M (1993) A Bed Called Home Life in the Migrant Labour Hostels of Cape
Town Ohio Ohio University Press
Segal L (1991) The Human Face of Violence Hostel dwellers speak In The Journal of
Southern African Studies Vol 18 No 1
SJN Development Planning Consultants (2000) Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial
Development Framework
South African Department of Housing 2008 Community Residential Programme
httpwwwhousinggovzaContentCRUHomehtm
South African Local Government Association
httpwwwsalgaorgzaappwebrootassetsfilesGuidelines20for20Municipalities
Flyer20rental20housing20NMApdf
South African Yearbook 20122013
httpwwwsouthafricanewyorknetconsulateYearbook2020131320Human20S
ettlemp
Statistics South Africa Census (2001) Concepts and Definitions Report
httpswwwStatistics+South+Africa+Census+(2001)+Concepts+and+Definitions+Repo
rt+03-02-26+Version
Thurman S (1997) Umzamo improving hostel dwellersrsquo accommodation in South
Africa Environment and Urbanisation Vol 9 No 2
Page | 98
Urban Sector Network Final Report August 2000 ndash April 2003 Hostel Redevelopment
httppdfusaidgovpdf_docsPdaby792pdf
Van der Berg S (2010) Current poverty and income distribution in the context of
South African history Stellenbosch Economic Working Papers 2210
Von Holdt K (2010) Nationalism Bureaucracy and Developmental State The South
African Case South African Review of Sociology Volume 41 Number 1
Watt A (2012) Essentials of project management
httpopentextbccaprojectmanagement
Ziehl S C (2001) Documenting Changing Family Patterns in South Africa Are Census
Data of any Value African Sociological Review 5(2)
Interviews with key informants
Shibambo Vincent Resident Engineer LTE Consulting Interview 14thAugust 2015
(Sethokga family units project site)
Mthethwa Jabu Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Housing Officer Interview 17
August 2015 (Ekurhuleni Kempton Park Housing Offices)
Mohlapamaswi Ward Councillor ANC Tembisa Ward 4 Interview 18 August 2015
(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers
Sololo Lufefe Ward 4 Economic Development Representative Interview 18 August
2015(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers)
Majikijela Sisa Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlements Sethokga
Hostel Conversion Project Manager Interview 19 August 2015 (Sethokga family units
project site boardroom)
Dyiki Malibongwe Housing Development Agency Official 7 September 2015
(Housing Development Agency head office Killarney Johannesburg)
Bako Simba Liefa Architects Interview 9 September (LTE House Sunninghill
Johannesburg)
Page | 3
In submitting this research report I (Shereen Tumelo Moloto) declare that the
contents contained in this report unless otherwise indicated in the text are my own
unaided work
This report is submitted to the School of Architecture and Planning in partial fulfilment
of a Bachelor of Science Honours degree in Urban and Regional Planning The contents
of this report have not been submitted before to any other institutionuniversity or for
any other degreequalification
(Signature of candidate)
day of year
Page | 4
To everyone that contributed to this study I am truly grateful
To the two women closest and dearest to my heart my mom and grandmother you
have both been such a blessing and your zealous attitudes and support have been
invaluable le mohau wa modimo To my family my dad my aunt my brother Kwena
and cousins Koena Mohau le Phuti your support through this time kept me positive
and encouraged I love you all and thank you Thank you to all my friends more
especially to Ayanda for your love and support always
I would like to acknowledge the financial contributions of the Womenrsquos Property
Network (WPN) and the National Research Foundation (NRF) to Nicky Chetty from
WPN your optimism and gusto was always so refreshing Thank you
I am also grateful to the following people
My supervisor Dr Sarah Charlton the inputs that you gave and the contribution that
you made towards developing this study were truly invaluable and much
appreciated To Jabu Mthethwa Malibongwe Dyiki Simba Bako Cllr Mohlapamaswi
Sisa Majikijela Lufefe Sololo Vincent Shibambo Musa Ndaba and Mmagang
Modisha Thank you all for taking the time to share your thoughts and perspectives
Thank you to Nelson and Rosie for the hopefulness and wisdom you relentlessly
provided To Nqobile Malaza you model astuteness and diligence thank you for
being such a wonderful exemplar of potency and valour To Riaan Engelbercht I am
grateful for your editorial inputs
Page | 5
To think too long about doing a
thing often becomes its undoing ndash
Eva young
Page | 6
This study emanates as a result of two main contributing factors the first being
somewhat retrospective and the second being of academic interest and
inquisitiveness Both will hopefully contribute to a study that will make a meaningful
contribution to broader scholarly literature and learning
I grew up living fairly close to a hostel I had walked past this particular hostel
(Sethokga) on numerous occasions in fact more times than I can recall but I had
never set foot in a hostel until quite recently It was not because I was told not to go
into the hostel or cautioned not to mingle with those residing in the hostel but there
was always this strange feeling of unease and uncertainty that presented itself in the
lofty dim grungy facade of this place There was in myself however I curiousness
about the hostel not just because of how it looked that is the extensive and obvious
outward appearance of wear and tear but the ingenuous wondering of how this
place functioned Who lived there how did they live there and so I rather naively
wondered why anyone would chose to live lsquoin that placersquo What was also always
curious was how the hostel seemed to be remote from the township which
surrounded it
Some ten years later after many years that this hostel had been out of sight and for
the most part out of mind I was in the neighbourhood and noticed these more
appealing apartment-like structures that appeared to be replacing the old structures
and with a great deal of inquisitiveness and some courage I set to inquire on this The
abstract below confers some of my own sentiments that of the few published studies
on hostels most of the focus has been on hostels in Johannesburg and Cape Town
(Dyiki interview 2015) Hence the fact that the case study for this study was situated
in an area that is quite literally and somewhat figuratively lsquoclose to homersquo provided
personal eagerness and allure about this study and an opportunity to confront this
oversight
ldquo by an accident of research the hostels in Cape Town have been under a far
more intense sociological gaze than those on the East Rand Given the sudden
prominence of the inner city hostels in the Transvaal war we have been forced to
recognise and attempt to overcome this oversight of the few published studies
on the hostels in the Transvaal most focus on Johannesburg and are essentially
descriptiverdquo (Segal 19915)
Page | 7
While I have always been curious about where and how people live and their
experiences and reality in the places they reside hostels have always intrigued me
This particular focus on hostels also emanates as a result of a particular frustration
within my standing as a scholar with what has continually appeared to me that is to
be this sort of overstretched overemphasis and preoccupation by our post-1994
government with shanty towns This is not to say that I think shanty towns are not a
significant area of concern characterised by some of the worst living conditions and
rightfully so deserve concerted attention and decisive remedial measures According
to Segal (1991) much like hostel dwellers the residents of shantyrsquos form part of the
South African populace who have been amongst the most severely exploited and
disadvantaged (Segal 1991)
In focusing on hostels as a euphemism for single-sex labour compounds one is
confronted with a similarly momentous and multifaceted circumstance As hostels
were and largely still continue to be very much part of the housing crisis in the country
and so this research report will endeavour to cast some light on hostels to
contextualise hostels the hostel conversion approach and the associated stigma of
hostel live within a contemporary South African context
Page | 8
Chapter one Introductory chapter15
1 Introduction15
11 Background to the study17
12 Rationale18
13 Problem statement18
14 Research question and sub-questions19
15 Significance of the study19
16 Aim and objectives of the research20
17 Research methodology20
171 Type of research20
172 What kind of information is needed22
173 Collecting data22
174 Sampling22
175 Ethical considerations23
18 Conclusion24
Chapter two Theoretical backdrop25
2 Introduction25
21 Contextualising hostels26
22 Key concepts theories ideas and arguments27
221 The historic model of hostels the conceptualisation of the hostel system28
222 Migration and the notion of migrant labour labourers as conceived under the
hostel system29
223 The notion of bedhold31
Page | 9
224 The stigma of hostel life31
225 Family versus household configurations32
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing33
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy35
228The role and significance of communitypublic participation in hostel conversion
projects35
23 Conclusion38
Chapter three Introducing Sethokga hostel39
3 Introduction39
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)39
311 Geographic description of the study area41
312 Locality44
313 Local and municipal context45
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel50
321 Built formArchitecture50
322 Municipal services54
323 The adjoining area55
33 Conclusion56
Chapter four The states approach to hostel conversion58
4 Introduction58
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach58
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach59
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme59
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process60
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing61
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised
Housing61
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country62
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme63
44 The Community Residential Units Programme65
45 Conclusion67
Chapter five The Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project68
5 Introduction68
Page | 10
51 Outline of the main components of the project68
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project68
512 Project phases69
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project70
521 Broad vision and aim of the project74
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and
in turn set to address those needs and challenges76
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project77
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful78
53 Visual narrative of the site of the family units79
531Architectural designsplans79
532 The project site of the family units82
533 Inside the family units84
53 Summary of main themes and findings86
54 Conclusion88
Chapter six Concluding chapter89
61 Review and reflections89
62 Limitations of the study91
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners91
64 Conclusion92
List of references94
Page | 11
Pages
Maps
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni
hostel and Vusimuzi hostel40
Map 2 Locality map44
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex45
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework48
Figures
Figure 1 Ground floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 2 First floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 3 Elevation of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 4 Collage of exterior imagery of the hostel50
Figure 5 Collage of interior imagery of the hostel52
Figure 6 Municipal amenities54
Figure 7 The adjoining area55
Figure 8 Community meeting agenda74
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga developmenthelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip76
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development planhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip79
Figure 11 Architects Section F-Fhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figue 12 Architects Section E-Ehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figure 13 South Elevation80
Figure 14 North Elevatonhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip81
Figure 15 East Elevation81
Figure 16 West Elevation81
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site82
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units84
Table
Table 1 Total workforce in the period December 2013 - January 2014 Sethokga
sitehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip72
Page | 12
ANC African National Congress
Cllr Councillor
CRU Community Residential Units
DoHS Department of Human Settlements
EMM Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
GPDHS Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement
HRP Hostel Redevelopment Programme
IDP Integrated Development Plan
IFP Inkatha Freedom Party
MSDF Metropolitan Spatial Development Framework
PWV Pretoria ndash Witwatersrand ndash Vereeniging
RDP Reconstruction and Development Programme
SDF Spatial Development Framework
USAID United States Agency for International Development
USN Urban Sector Network
Page | 13
Chapter one will essentially introduce the research report The aim of this chapter is as
follows highlight the objective of the study provide a background to the study and
also discuss the rationale and problem statement In addition to detailing the
research question the significance of this study and the research methodology will
also be reviewed
Coincidently this research report is written and takes place at a time where there has
been somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms With the prevailing question being ldquoWhat iscontinues to be the
role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo Although this study will not in effect
actively seek to answer that particular question it presents a valuable premise for this
study ldquoFamily units to address the stigma of hostel liferdquo
The main aim of this chapter is to contextualise hostel to position the study within an
expanded theoretical framework The main chapter will in part argue that hostels
have largely remained as urban enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric and
that the rigid structures of regulation and control which were imposed on hostel
dwellers have perpetuated a complex state of affairs The literature review section
which details some of the key concepts theories ideas and arguments on the topic
will elaborate further on this
This chapter aims to provide a comprehensive description of the study area and so it
is in this chapter that the local as well as municipal context of the study area will
altogether be considered The aim of this chapter is to provide the reader with a sort
of lsquofeelrsquo of Sethokga hostel and its present-day circumstance It will attempt to
articulate to the reader the authors own experience and account of the study area
Page | 14
in an effort to provide the reader with a well-versed narrative of the multifaceted
nature of the hostel and the complex reality in which its residents endure
The South African statersquos approach to hostel redevelopment conversion is
discussed It is argued that the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of hostel
redevelopment conversion Chapter four discusses a number of state policy and
approaches addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo Ahead of this however the evolution of the
hostel redevelopment conversion approach is examined which dates back to the
earliest (soon after 1994) efforts by the South African government to remedy the ills of
the hostel system
Chapter five examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seeks to unpack
the conceptualisation of the project This chapter reflects and draws extensively on
the findings of the field work and the invaluable insights offered by the key informants
The main components of the hostel conversion project are examined and the vision
of Sethokga personified by the hostel conversion project is presented in chapter five
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoSo what does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
Page | 15
Introductory chapter
In the wake of the political transition in South Africa in 1994 and for some time
preceding this time frame violence squalor overcrowding and socio-political strife
had long become characteristic of some of the features associated with hostels and
the stigma of hostel life (Thurman 1997) Due to its history as systematically
disempowered yet politically vocal enclaves we have come to know or perhaps be
familiar with hostels as highly contentious and antagonistic environments with a
burdened local identity (Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The stigma of hostel life constitutes among a host of conditions an innate reality
where the residents of hostels inhibit isolated destitute and unbecoming spaces
(Segal 1991) Built as single-sex labour compounds to accommodate African migrant
labourers for the duration of their stay in South Africarsquos white urban areas hostels
occupy a unique position within the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape
(Thurman 1997) As sojourners in South Africarsquos white urban areas the law
constructed a lsquolegalrsquo person called a labourer who was lsquoauthorisedrsquo to temporarily
reside in the urban space but had to retreat to their rural quarters once their lsquoservicersquo
had been concluded (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Thus to draw attention to the
unkindness of their living conditions many hostel dwellers have continued for the
better part of South Africarsquos democracy to lsquochoosersquo physical violence as a tool
perceived to best serve and afford some attention to their troubles (Pienaar and
Crofton 2005)
Within the context of this research report the term hostels widely refer to single-sex
dormitory style labour compounds which emerged in South Africa under the
apartheid system and ideology of separate development (Pienaar and Crofton
2005) The ideology of separate development and the resultant influx control policies
were a distinctive trait of the government of a particular juncture in the countryrsquos
history - a government that as part of its mandate held to discourage the permanent
settlement of the African populace in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) This further
translated itself in the governmentrsquos refusal to plan and consent to any sort of
lsquomeaningfulrsquo investment into areas designated for the other who were primarily
located in the townships on the periphery of the urban terrain (Ramphele 1993)
Page | 16
Badly designed poorly built and suffering many years of neglect hostels were
primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for the comfort of hostel
dwellers (Thurman 1997) Conceivably the hostel system socialised its inhabitants into
an undignified and callous condition which has in some respect persisted and has
unfortunately not wholly been reconciled (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In hostels that
were male occupied hostel dwellers were regarded as lsquomen of four worldsrsquo which
referred to their present and existing life within the hostel the surrounding township(s)
places of work and their rural homes (Segal 1991) The hostel system made it
impossible for hostel dwellers to live in the hostel with their families ie wives
husbands partners children (Segal 1991) This consequence is particularly important
to note at this early stage in the report because of the wisdom and context it adds as
the study progresses
Coincidently this research is written and takes place at a time where there has been
somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms Undoubtedly the prevailing question has been ldquoWhat is should be
the role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo The current Minister of Human
Settlements has said that ldquohostels no longer have a place within South Africarsquos
democratically reconfigured state and so the state needs to get rid of hostelsrdquo (Sisulu
2015) However in a nation such as South Africa efforts towards transition are
ambiguous complex and can often be marked by violence (Mosoetsa 2011)
According to Thurman (1997) of an estimated 604 000 hostel beds around the country
in the late 1990s accommodated whole families relatively close to urban centres
Furthermore Thurman argues that hostels present both a significant challenge and an
opportunity for government NGOs developers and hostel dwellers themselves High
density housing stock stood to gain a considerably large supply of low income
(Thurman 1997) Even while a large number of hostel redevelopmentconversion
projects continue to be riddled with tension and difficulty the prospect(s) for change
and reform that they offer cannot simply be dismissed
This study seeks to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel conversion project to
develop an informed understanding of the defining features and characteristics of
this particular hostel conversion project It examines what is and what has been the
nature of engagement and dialogue between the various stakeholders involved and
discusses the insights they were able to offer to this study In 2015 21 years into South
Page | 17
Africarsquos democracy we have to wonder what is needed to make amends and offset
the dishonour of hostel life
11 Background to the study
We have to understand what the hostel system did was to lsquoaccommodatersquo the
African populace in single-sex labour compounds (Segal 1991) Upon their arrival
their presence in urban areas was constrained as they were met with strict rules and
restrictions (Ramphele 1993) In turn social relations were severally volatile and
ambiguous under the hostel system as hostel dwellers were constrained in their ability
to interact in certain or in their own chosen ways (Thurman 1997) There have been a
number of authors who have noted that the notion of family was partly if not entirely
redefined under this system (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were designed with little or no
thought given of human comfort security and interaction and many are still in
appalling neglected and overcrowded conditions (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) For
many people hostels represent a bitter and hopeless reminder of the past while for
others they are a well prized and affordable shelter in an environment of serve
homelessness (Thurman 1997)
Accordingly soon after 1994 South Africarsquos democratic government made some
attempt to convert hostels into environments suitable for family life although the
extent of this has not entirely been clear (DoHS 2015) This was met with hostility
violence and unwillingness by some hostel dwellers particularly those in the Pretoria
Witwatersrand and Vereeniging (PWV) region to have their hostels
convertedredeveloped into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010) The
violence that had become synonymous with hostel life became an overwhelming
impediment that proved difficult to overcome (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that the idea of an unambiguous constant and unrestricted
presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a point of contention for
some of the men who had far too long become accustomed to living lsquoalonersquo as
men Some expressed unwillingness while others found it a struggle to comprehend or
endorse this change that seemed far too unfamiliar and a challenge to come to
grips with (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Thus in hostels where hostel conversion projects have since taken-off the general
attitudes perceptions and reception of the projects have in some respects continued
to be negative and unwelcomed Scepticism tension and hostility add to the already
complex nature of the hostel conversion projects (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
Page | 18
2010) Hostels are still largely spaces confronted with deep social injustices (ie poor
living conditions a lack of privacy overcrowded) and are an insult to the dignity of
their occupants in several ways as both spatially limited and socio-economically
limiting spaces (Ramphele 1993) The limits imposed by hostels onto hostel dwellers
have persisted in protracting unkindness and a distorted conception of the
fundamental purpose of housing Hostels remain as an unfortunate symbol of a
former governmentrsquos refusal and failure to acknowledge the personhood (the
position and quality of being an individual or having feelings perspectives integrity
and human characteristics needs and wants) of the men and women they housed
(Ramphele 1993)
12 Rationale
Arguably hostel conversion projects and particularly the conceptualisation of these
projects is still a relatively under-researched field Based on my efforts to find
published work on the subject and even though there have been a number of
hostels across the country which have undergone or are undergoing hostel
conversion this remains a rather neglected study field
Hostels within their historic make-up were for the most part premised on fairly uniform
ideals arrangements and gender configurations The demographic setting within
some hostels across the country have since become a lot more fluid and departed
from their former mandatory construct (as strictly single-sex spaces) In what were
predominantly male occupied hostels women and children have since moved into
some of those hostels
Sethokga hostel which will serve as the case study for this research is a hostel that is
still predominantly male occupied but is undergoing hostel conversion to convert the
hostel into family units I believe that the fact that the hostel is still predominantly
male occupied presents an intriguing dimension to this study on hostel conversion
and efforts to grapple with the research question
13 Problem statement
In the case of Sethokga hostel a hostel conversion project is underway but it is not
clear what has sparked such a conversion and to what extent it is driven by the
available policies or assessments of needs or what attempt has been made to meet
these needs Subsequently what would the conversion of a predominantly male
Page | 19
dominated hostel rife with historically inherent conditions necessitate Therefore
how has the conversion project grasped the experience of men within such a hostel
and how has it grasped the concept of family life
14 Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units been conceptualised and
based upon the conceptualised ideas does it address the stigma of hostel life and it
what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What led to the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail What is the broad aim and vision
of the project What is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
15 The significance of the study - positioning the study relative to existing academic
literature
The significance of this research report lies in what I believe is a gap in the scope of
work covered over the years on hostels particularly on hostel conversion projects
Based on my efforts to find published work on the subject questions around what
these projects entail their implications relevance and impact remain unanswered
In the work I have managed to access so far this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects has somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore there needs to be more inquiry and study
conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel conversion
projects
As documented by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) there are vast and intricate
layers of engagement communication participation and even discontentment
Page | 20
involved in hostel conversion projects For instance the legitimacy around where
decision-making lies and which avenues are or should be available to voice
concerns have been some of the challenges relating to hostel conversion and have
added to the already complex nature of these projects
There is most certainly room for a study to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel
conversion project and probe this idea that family units could serve as an adequate
tool for the apt reform of hostels as many of us have come to know them associate
with them or even disassociate from them
16 Aim and objectives of the research
The main aim of this research report is to examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project and how the project has been conceptualised
Objectives
To examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
To develop a more comprehensive understanding of the hostel conversion
approach relative to the socio-economic and political context of the hostel
To explore the possibility and potential of family units as a viable tool to
addressing the stigma of hostel life
To examine how the project has understood the needs and challenges of the
residents and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
To examine the specific spatial focus of the project
17 Research methodology
171 Type of research
The methodology used in the study is a qualitative approach to research and semi-
structured interviews were conducted as the primary means of data collection
Additionally the data collection process involved the use of a variety of sources
which ranged from books journal articles newspaper articles and online media
platforms in the form of articles and radio podcasts
Page | 21
According to Cresswell (2009) this particular method to research (a qualitative
method) entails among other things the use of horizontal dialogue conversation and
the exchange of ideas between the interviewer and the interviewees (Cresswell
2009) Key informants were identified on the basis of their knowledge of andor
involvement in the Sethokga hostel conversion project and the following individuals
were interviewed
1st interviewee Mr Vincent Shibambo resident engineer with LTE consulting (the
company facilitating the construction and administration of the project) Interview
conducted 14th August 2015 at the project site The interview took place in the
boardroom of the project site offices
2nd interviewee Mr Jabu Mthethwa housing officer from the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality Interview conducted 17th August 2015 the interview took place in Mr
Mthethwarsquos office at the council offices in the Kempton Park CBD area
3rd interviewee ANC Ward 4 Tembisa Ward Councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi Interview
conducted 18th August 2015 in the ward councillorrsquos office at the ward councillors
chambers situated adjacent to the project site offices within the vicinity of the hostel
4th interviewee Mr Lufefe Sololo Ward 4 Tembisa Economic Development Rep (Mr
Sololo sits on the ward committee that advises the ward councillor) Interview
conducted 18th of August 2015 at Sethokga hostel
5th interviewee Mr Sisa Majikijela official from the Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlements Mr Majikijela is the current project manager of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project Interview conducted 19th of August 2015 in the boardroom
of the project site offices
6th interviewee Mr Malibongwe Dyiki who was a resident of a hostel in Cape Town in
the early 1980s He then became a community representative in later years and then
moved on to be a government official facilitating hostel redevelopments in the
Western Cape He has written and published on hostels and has also participated in
policy discussions on the Hostel Redevelopment Programme Interview was done on
the 7th of September 2015 at the Housing Development Agencyrsquos head office in
Killarney Johannesburg where he is currently working as the Programme Manager for
the mining towns programme
7th interviewee Simba Bako architect with Liefa Architects (appointed by LTE
consulting Liefa Architects were responsible for the design of the family units)
Page | 22
Interview conducted on the 9th of September 2015 at LTE House in Sunninghill
Johannesburg
172 What kind of information is needed
The kind of information that was needed was information which contextualised the
study area within its broader local and municipal context Pre-existing data
particularly demographic and statistical data on the hostel and its surroundings
Ekurhulenirsquos Integrated Development Plan the Metrorsquos Spatial Development
Framework and information that would give an overview of the geographic social
economic and possibly even the political context of the study area is needed
Moreover project reports studies memorandums or minutes and state policy on
hostel conversion would also be useful
173 Collecting data
In collecting data there were a number of methods and tools that were used which
involved moments of ad hoc discussion and deliberation around the topic What was
invigorating and always thrilling was peoplersquos interest and curiosity regarding this
study The impromptu encounter(s) with people who were open and ready to share
their point of views and experience(s) honestly made the data collection process
that much easier
There was a considerable amount of time spent on examining literature books
articles (both academic and media sources) sources on the internet and journals
Collecting data also involved examining similar programmes and projects on hostel
conversionredevelopment so collecting desktop data and consulting library sources
was an invaluable part of collecting data
174 Sampling
The study sample is important for any research The choice between qualitative
quantitative or even the consideration of using a mixed methods approach should
be determined by the research question and not decided subjectively In grappling
with the research question it seemed most appropriate for the purpose of this study to
make use of a qualitative approach It was believed that a qualitative approach
Page | 23
would provide the necessary framework to respond to the research question and
address the aim and objectives of the study In answering the lsquohowrsquo and lsquowhyrsquo
questions that the study would pose a qualitative approach would engage in a sort
of comprehensive exploration of the many-sided and possibly complex dynamics of
the Sethokga hostel conversion project For this reason a qualitative interview-
centred approach was used (Marshall 1996)
Marshall (1996) argues that there are three broad methods commonly used in
selecting a study sample that is convenience judgement and theoretical sampling
techniques Convenience sampling involves the most accessible person(s) it is the
least time consuming requires the least effort and financing Judgement sampling
also referred to as purposeful sampling is according to Marshall (1996) the most
widely used sampling technique With judgement sampling the researcher
purposefully and actively selects a sample that would best respond to their research
question and in principle convenience is set aside While theoretical sampling
involves a process of selection of a sample that is mainly driven by and rooted in a
theoretical position the sample is selected to examine or elaborate a particular
theory (Marshall 1996)
For the purpose of this study the judgemental sampling technique was used and this
entailed the active and purposeful selection of what Marshall refers to as lsquosubjectsrsquo
with particular expertise ie key informants The sample selection was based on my
prior experience and practical knowledge of the study area The limitation however
was that there were quite a number of elaborate and contentious issues at play
which within the limits of this study could not be explored at length on account of
time constraints and the particular focus of this study
175 Ethical considerations
As a young female scholar entering into a rather conflicted lsquotoughrsquo and culturally-
laden environment I was faced with what was an apparent concern for safety and
so on my trips to the hostel I was always accompanied by my father or a friend
Initially my intention was to interview some of the hostel residents but the sensitivities
around the harshness of their living conditions were highlighted as a possible area of
vulnerability and the spate of xenophobia attacks particularly in and around hostels
suggested reconsideration As a researcher I ensured that the participants were all
Page | 24
well aware and informed that their participation was voluntary and they were at
liberty to withdraw their involvement at any stage The interviewees were informed of
the choice to remain anonymous if they wished and that the information they shared
would be used to develop this research report Thus my ethical obligation as a
researcher was to ensure that I did minimal harm and unintentional damage through
my research that I conducted myself responsibly and professionally at all times and
that I reported accurately what I found including unforeseen and even negative
findings
18 Conclusion
Hostels consolidated the migrant labour system They served not only to control the
number of black labour residing in urban areas but also to manage its behaviour As
hostels were designed to be unattractive and uncomfortable many comparisons
have been made between hostels and institutions such as army barracks and prisons
There is a window of opportunity in promoting hostel conversion but injecting
resources into previously marginalised communities have resulted and is resulting in
conflict local power struggles and competition for those resources (Thurman 1997)
The next chapter will discuss the theoretical backdrop of this study and elaborate on
key concepts theories ideas and arguments that have been of particular relevance
to unpacking the research question
Page | 25
Theoretical backdrop
2 Introduction
It is imperative at this point to contextualise the term hostels so as to clearly il lustrate
what is meant by it This section of the report will contextualise the term hostels and it
will examine key concepts theories ideas and arguments that are of particular
relevance to the study
Furthermore chapter two argues that hostels have largely remained as urban
enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
It argues that the rigid structures of regulation and control that were imposed upon
the former inhabitants of hostels were essentially just one part of a multi-faceted and
disconcerting circumstance that has continued to live on within a large number of
hostels (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012) This view that hostels operated and in some
respect continue to operate under a complex set of circumstances is shared and
supported by the work of authors such as Segal (1991) Ramphele (1993) Goldblatt
and Meintjes(1996) Thurman (1997) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) Dyiki (2006) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) Subsequently some of their work will be used to
unpack the research question and draw on certain aspects that resonate with the
case study The following abridged abstract describes some of the complexities
around hostels and the views captured in the work of some of the authors mentioned
above
According to Segal (1991) hostel life and the regulations imposed upon hostel
dwellers made it extremely difficult to maintain family life that is men would leave
their families in the rural areas for long periods of time to find work in the city
Ramphele (1993) notes that the families of the men would then became reliant for
their survival upon the remittance of the men Mapetla (2005) makes a compelling
argument that suggests that within contemporary society men are traditionally
culturally and even spiritually still regarded as the head the protector and provider of
their families even as the lines delineating the roles of men and women within
contemporary society have become faint and more fluid Arguably hostels still exist
within a highly complex setting (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Page | 26
21 Contextualising hostels
Generally hostels were badly designed poorly built and many have been suffering
years of neglect (Thurman 1997) Hostels were primarily built to accommodate
African migrant workers for the containment of their labour over the duration of their
stay in what were demarcated as South Africarsquos white urban areas (Thurman 1997)
There are notably three types of hostels namely public sector private sector and
grey sector hostels (Ramphele 1993)
Public sector hostels are hostels that were built and managed by provincial or local
authorities and mainly accommodated workers across a range of sectors (Ramphele
1993) Private sector hostels were built by private sector enterprise to house private
sector labourers who would mainly be working in the factories and mines (Pienaar
and Crofton 2005) Grey sector hostels were built on public sector-owned land by the
private sector under some form of contractual agreement with a government
authority (provincial or local) but were largely managed and controlled by private
sector employers (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Public and grey sector hostels were
generally situated in the townships (Thurman 1997) However when they were
planned these hostels were generally located on the outskirts of the cities but with
increased urban growth they now relatively tend to be more centrally situated
(Thurman 1997)
Ramphele (1993) argued that each hostel had a distinct form and quality about it
Elements of tribalism certain customs systems of belief and association dimensions of
conflict and conflict resolution were not homogeneous across all hostels (Ramphele
1993) The type of work that the migrant labourers did across the sectors they worked
was often rudimentary It ranged from unskilled to very basic semi-skilled work and it
was quite labour intensive in return for meagre earnings (Ramphele 1993)
Historically hostels were characterised by two main geographic classifications firstly
hostels in the backdrop of an urban context (ie also referring to inner city hostels)
and secondly hostels in the areas around mines (Segal 1991) According to Segal
(1991) urban context hostels had a more diffused grouping of hostel dwellers than
their mining counterparts (Segal 1991) Hostels in urban context developed broader
and somewhat complex relations with the outside community This contrasted with
the extreme isolation of hostel dwellers in hostels around the mines Therefore hostels
in the urban context were to a lesser extent conceived to be lsquomore openrsquo and lsquoless
strictly controlledrsquo However both were essentially sites of control and exploitation
Page | 27
with clearly marked physical boundaries in form of high walls and fences with single
and restricted entry and exit points (Segal 1991)
Hostels in urban areas had government bureaucracies responsible for their
management and maintenance as opposed to a single employercompany (Segal
1991) Moreover hostels in the urban context accommodated a wider and more
diverse range of workers who did not necessarily work for the same
employercompany or have uniform working hours or shifts In urban hostels ethnicity
was not the official organiser of hostel dwellers as men from different backgrounds
and homelands would and could share rooms (Ramphele 1993) Lastly and perhaps
the most important distinguishing feature of the two was the fact that hostels in urban
areas were not under the extensive force of lsquototal controlrsquo as was the experience of
mining hostel dwellers (Segal 1991 Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
According to Pienaar and Crofton (2005) public sector hostels accommodated the
largest number of hostel dwellers Overall the quality of living environment of hostels
was generally poor but this was particularly bad in public sector hostels (Ramphele
1993) Additionally the administrative processes and management of public sector
hostels was under dire strain as no clear records of those that lived in the hostels or
those entering and exiting the hostel were kept (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that although private sector hostels were considered to be
better managed and maintained The general state of all hostels whether public or
privately owned was largely characterised by poor living conditions a lack of
privacy the sharing of very limited spaces a distressed local context and
overcrowded conditions (Ramphele 1993) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) further note
that around the early 1980s hostel residents simply started to withdraw from payment
of rentals and thus the maintenance of the hostels grew even thinner and steadily
non-existent Public sector hostels grew especially financially and politically
unmanageable (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
22 Key concepts theories ideas and arguments
To unpack the research question and contextualise the study within a broader
theoretical framework this section of the report will discuss and draw on a number of
concepts theories ideas and arguments
Page | 28
221 The historic model of hostels the conceptualisation of the hostel system
In grappling with the historic model of the hostel system this section of the report will
discuss two main themes The conceptualisation of the hostel system and migration
migrant labour as conceived under the hostel system It illustrates the effect hostels
have had on shaping the lives and experiences of their inhabitants in unique and
complex ways (Thurman 1997)
South Africa is a country marked by a legacy of systematic discrimination and the
deliberate disempowerment of a lsquocategoryrsquo of its population (Thurman 1997) Hostels
were established supported and perpetuated by methodical policy frameworks and
brute controls to discourage the permanent settlement of the in historically lsquowhite
areasrsquo (Segal 1991) Thurman (1997) argues that hostels occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are symbolic of three centuries of
systematic racial discrimination
Seemingly ignited by and originating in the mining industry in the nineteenth century
the construction of hostels reached a peak during the 1960s and 1970s in the period
that has been referred to as the ldquogrand apartheidrdquo years (Thurman 1997) They were
built as single-sex dormitory compounds to accommodate African migrant labourers
as sojourners in what were delineated as white urban areas (Ramphele 1993) In
hostels which were intended strictly for male migrant labourersrsquo job-seeking by
African women was criminalised and a deliberate policy not to provide family
housing was pursued (Ramphele 1993)
Common to hostels was the blurring and hostility of the boundaries between the
hostel dwellers place(s) of work and their living spaces (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) In
turn some authors have argued that hostels in some sense functioned as a lsquototal
institutionrsquo According to Segal (1991) and Ramphele (1993) geographically many
hostels were isolated and situated literally at the edges of urban areas and society in
general They were primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for
human comfort safety or enrichment (Thurman 1997) The heavy-handedness of the
hostel system imposed a cunning inferiority complex a sense of no escape yet quite
interestingly a later unwillingness and indifference to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have
their hostel converted into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Ramphele (1993) and Segal (1991) make a rather compelling argument and share
the view that the behaviour and conduct of some of the hostel dwellers against
Page | 29
having their hostel converted into family units is indicative of similar behaviour and
actions displayed by long-term prisoners and people contained in barracks They
argue that a substantial number of long-term inmates would in some instances
display great unwillingness and some difficulty to the prospect of re-entering society
after being socialised into a total institution a reformatory (Ramphele 1993 and
Segal 1991) According to a text by Statistics South Africa (2001) an institution can be
defined as a communal place of residence for persons with common characteristics
(Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001) One could then argue
that one of the common characteristics shared by many hostels was the migrant
labourer status attributed to them (Dyiki 2006)
222 Migration and the notion of migrant labour labourers as conceived under the hostel
system
Castles and Miller (2008) argues that all through time and space individuals and
families have been migrating and doing so for a number of reasons Universally the
migration lsquophenomenonrsquo was and has been as a result of varying factors and in
response to certain causes and events such as demographic growth environmental
changes development vs underdevelopment and the seeking of lsquobetterrsquo
opportunities (Castles and Miller 2008) Others have turned to migration to seek jobs
often located or perceived to be concentrated in larger urban centres (Collinson
and Adazu 2006 Castles and Miller 2008)
Migration can occur as a voluntary or forced process This study is particularly
interested in the event of migration that becomes forced migration when the
circumstances of individuals and families leave them little or no choice but to pursue
lsquohopersquo away from their native home-base (Castles and Miller 2008) Arguably this was
characteristic of the hostel model Hostels enabled mines and later other industries to
suppose and cause that hostel dwellers had homes in rural areas (Collinson 2006)
Seemingly the rural populace was the lsquodesiredrsquo workforce ushered into the city and
mines and exploited as labourers for the development of the urban-based economy
(Thurman 1997)
According to Thurman (1997) the residents of hostels were typically considered as
rural traditionalists and lsquodangerousrsquo outsiders by the residents of townships which
surrounded the hostel Their physical as well as social isolation meant that they often
retained strong links with their rural home-base (Segal 1991) This involved the
Page | 30
periodic movement of individual household members between the hostel and their
rural homes (Thurman 1997) The ruralurban linkages which were subsequently
fashioned became a distinguishing feature of not just hostel dwellers but the black
African populace and as a part of their experience of urban life (Collinson and
Adazu 2006) The costly urban world was thus considered by many as merely a place
of work (Segal 1991 and Ramphele 1993)
This type of migration - also often referred to as lsquocircularrsquo or lsquooscillatingrsquo migration -
became characteristic of a sort of temporary sentiment to life and living in the city
(Dyiki 2006) Additionally the events of circular migration presented certain
household dynamics and challenges in maintaining the often faint links between the
migrant and the households family left behind (Collionson 2006 Ramphele 1993)
Conceivably hostel dwellers have for a long time had a common rural orientation
(Segal 1991) ldquoIt has been repeatedly demonstrated that migrants do not leave
behind the countryside in their journey to the cityrdquo and this rural consciousness has
remained central to the migrant labour population (Segal 1991 9)
Within contemporary society the concept of lsquothe new economies of labour
migrationrsquo has emerged as an alternative position and argues that migration can be
and has become a household strategy (Collinson and Adazu 2006) According to
Collinson and Adazu (2006) within their analysis of contemporary migration patterns
migration has now largely become something that is purposefully chosen by
members of a household family This phenomenon involves the temporary migration
of some individuals within the household family in pursuit of opportunities towards
the collective betterment of the family household or even their broader community
(Collinson and Adazu 2006) Under this model of migration family and community
networks are considered to play an important and supporting role in facilitating
migration between urban-based and village-based households families (Collinson
and Adazu 2006) What is then required of the migrant is thatheshe reciprocate the
initial support offered by hisher household family community as received in hisher
rural-base (Collinson and Adazu 2006)
While in some respect migration is becoming a lsquolonged-forrsquo process and somewhat of
a deliberate choice on the other hand adverse circumstances force families
households to partake in this process as a means of survival (Collinson and Adazu
2006) The ability of migrants to maintain both an urban and rural residence in
whatever context ie historic or contemporary continues to present a social
geographic and economically complex state of affairs (Pienaar and Crofton (2005)
Page | 31
223 The notion of bedhold
The context of hostels designed to be uncomfortable and uninviting the closest
likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo was in the form of a bed Every aspect of life and
survival in hostels revolved around a bed (Ramphele 1993) According to Ramphele
(1993) this in turn perpetuated a circumstance of lsquoclientelismrsquo and blurred the lines of
patronage when it came to the exchanging of the membership of beds and when
beds were to be allocated or reallocated (Ramphele 1993) The ill-defined and fluid
relationship of patronage between bed-holders would in some respect function like
and resemble households (Ramphele 1993 Segal 1991 Mosoetsa 2011)
In some sense bed-holders assumed an intermediary role and served an informal
function as lsquolandlordsrsquo thus as proprietors of the bedhold (Ramphele 1993) Hostel
dwellers became lsquobed-holdersrsquo rather than lsquohouse-holdersrsquo in the urban space
(Segal 1991) It became unduly problematic that the bed was the only space over
which they could have any measure of control It after all distorted the perceptions
hostel dwellers developed of themselves in relation to their environment constraining
them to varying degrees (Ramphele 1993) Ramphele (1993) argues that the limits set
by physical space in hostels also defined in very clear terms the inside versus the
outside security versus insecurity family versus non-family and urban versus rural She
further argues that onersquos very identify in the hostel and their lsquolegal existencersquo in the
urban space depended on their attachment to a bed (Ramphele 1993) According
to Ramphele (1993) the bed acted as a sort of mediator thus lsquoa go-betweenrsquo the
hostel dwellers and the rest of society to which they remain somewhat disconnected
and possibly indifferent (Ramphele 1993)
224 The stigma of hostel life
The stigma of hostel life gave a rather conspicuous meaning to lsquoblack urban lifersquo and
their experience(s) of life in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were badly
designed poorly built and many suffer years of neglect (Thurman 1997) There have
been a number of authors who have argued that hostel dwellers suffered a great
injustice to their humanity their perception of self constrained relations with others
and a constant struggle to maintain family networks with their often rural-base
(Goldblatt and Mentjies 1996)
Page | 32
The living conditions in hostels have been expressed in basic terms as shocking
disgusting inhumane cruel and intolerable by both scholars and residents of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Hostel accommodation is undesirable both aesthetically and
conceptually and there are a number of common features which characterise most
hostels a lack of privacy overcrowded and poor living conditions very limited space
and a serious state of disrepair (Ramphele 1993) Failing to delineate private
personal space the purpose of hostels was to ensure a compliant labour force (Segal
1991)
According to Ramphele (1993) hostels represent physical space that is not only
limited but is also limiting Ramphele makes a distinction between the circumstance
and living arrangements of hostel dwellers and township residents Arguing that
although physical overcrowding of sleeping accommodation between the two
(hostel dwellers and township residents) many not be much different in terms of the
ratio of people to roomsbeds (Ramphele 1993) For township residents it is most likely
that they would be sharing these limited facilities with kin or friends rather than
complete strangers (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of hostels some men
women may adapt too well to living in single-sex hostels and would find change too
difficult to cope with (Ramphele 1993)
225 Family versus household configurations
The terms family and household are not necessarily synonymous According to the
Department of Social Development (2012) ldquoa household comprises of either (i) a
single person who makes provision(s) for hisher food or other essentials for living or (ii)
a group of at least two or more people living together who make common provision
for their food and other essentialsrdquo (White Paper on Families in South Africa 2012 11)
Moreover the Department notes that a household can contain a family yet the
members of the household are not always necessarily a family further remarking that
ldquoa household performs the functions of providing a place of dwelling and the sharing
of resources and these functions can be performed among people who are related
by blood or people without any such relationshiprdquo (White Paper on Families in South
Africa 2012 11) This distinction of family and household configurations is useful to this
study for two main reasons (a) as it has been suggested that one of the broad aims of
the hostel conversion approach is to introduce facilitate lsquofamily lifersquo and to inject a
family quality into these historically single-sex environments (b) Is it then supposed by
the Sethokga hostel conversion project that the household configurations in the
hostel are at present existing wholly in the absence of family configurations
Page | 33
It is important to be mindful of the fact that with time households have become
more complex and family structures more diffused (Mosoetsa 2011) Hostel dwellers
through years of living under space constraints and in single-sex accommodation
have developed certain ideologies practices and habits (Thurman 1997) Arguably
the hostel system redefined and reshaped family and household configurations and
constructed a complex social setting (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of male
occupied hostels relationships among men are characterised by hierarchy and
Ramphele (1993) notes that this is legitimised by lsquotraditionrsquo and is based on age
differences The older men are more likely to occupy positions of authority and be
regarded as the lsquoheadsrsquo of the household and in authority to organise the affairs of
the household Whereas the younger men would be cast in the role of attending to
duties considered lsquotypicalrsquo to women and that is the upkeep of the household ie
cleaning cooking In this lsquomanrsquos worldrsquo tradition and age regulate the day-to-day
function of the household (Ramphele 1993) The links between the men and the
families they had have left behind has arguably become increasingly scant and
incoherent (Grieger et al 2013) With the blurring of their lsquobindingrsquo reciprocal
obligations and support the conception of family life was redefined and put under
considerable strain as a result of migrant labour laws and the criminalisation of job-
seeking activity in urban areas of their rural wives partners (Segal 1991)
In both family and household configurations shared obligations and mutual support
takes many forms (Mapetla 2005) The family structure is perceived to be the
lsquocommander and regulator of the activities and conduct of the individual members
The family structure has been set apart from a household in that a household is more
of a residential unit where related andor none-related individuals in a sense lsquoeat
from the same potrsquo (Mosoetsa 2011) In some cases the individuals and members of
a household provide themselves jointly with food andor other essentials however a
household can also consist of a person who lives alone The distinguishing feature is
that a family configuration consists of people individuals who have a blood-kin
connection and this can include immediate and extended relatives but the same
does not necessarily always hold true for household configurations (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005 Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001)
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing
South Africa can still somewhat be regarded as a traditionally patrilineal society
where land and property are traced through the male lineage where upon marriage
Page | 34
a woman is required to leave her native home to reside with her husband at his home
(Mapetla 2005) This system has been more inclined to empower men (Ziehl 2001)
Subsequently within contemporary society and within the lsquonew politics of gender
relationsrsquo property and land ownership have since become a highly contentious
subject Therefore the issue of housing is quite a significant one and warrants some
reflection particularly the aspect of men and housing (Mapetla 2005)
Gender roles have steadily been changing and are increasingly becoming ill-defined
(Ziehl 2001) So how can or rather how should housing projects and interventions
such as hostel conversion projects be more gender sensitive inclusive representative
and reflective of the changing gender roles both in a social and spatial sense
Gender considerations regarding housing and housing projects need to be mindful of
the innate differentiation between men and women and their not always uniform
needs and interaction(s) with space (Mapetla 2005) The often male bias when it
comes to access to housing might just further be perpetuated through hostel
conversion projects The question here is then does this new conception of a
reconfigured living environment in the form of family units make provision(s) towards
addressing any of the housing-related gender biases What do these projects
consider important in terms of gender issues if at all how have these issues been
factored into the projects
Gender and housing related theory has often argued strongest the case of women in
their inability to access housing land the law and related funding (Ziehl 2001) The
issues of gender relations and access to housing have become increasingly topical
(Mosoetsa 2011) Womenrsquos rights access to the law resources and social amenities
have been areas which have gained a significant amount of traction in both policy
and academic circles owing to historically discriminatory laws (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005) However in South Africa and perhaps this is true for many other
societies traditionally culturally and even spiritually men are still to a significant extent
regarded as the head of household the foremost provider for their families (Mapetla
2005)
Within the context of hostels migrant labour laws which also made it a point that the
remuneration of its African labour workforce was as horrendous as the conditions they
lived in shaped a particular aspect of menrsquos relation to housing in the urban context
and their experiences (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In a study conducted by Segal
(1991) a group of men living in a hostel were interviewed to give their account of life
in the hostel According to Segal (1991) it became apparent that the men tolerated
the hostel because they felt humiliated by even the thought of losing their roles as the
Page | 35
provider for their family Some men suggested that they could and would not bring
their wives or children to the hostel for even a brief visit (Segal 1991) In their minds
they were better off alone in the citymine because the burden of their own survival
was already enormous (Segal 1991)
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy
Large sections of the South African state have continued to be institutionally
ineffective unsustainable and dysfunctional (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert 2011) Post-
1994 efforts towards nation-building and state formation in the country have taken
many forms a unitary state the inauguration of a new president of the Republic of
South Africa and the promulgation of the 1996 Constitution of the Republic(Barnet
1999) Furthermore the ideals of nation building and state formation would attempt
to diffuse into a sound and convergent form what was once opposite and adverse
(von Holdt 2010)
The housing deficit in the country was and has continued to be one of the greatest
challenges facing the government particularly the inadequate provision and access
to housing for the black majority who had been rendered destitute and occupying
dreadful accommodation (Thurman 1997) In what could better be regarded as
temporary disaster relief areas than housing suitable for any human to call lsquohomersquo
(Ramphele 1993) Post-apartheid bureaucratic inefficiency class formation
redundant budgetary rituals antagonistic attitudes towards public service vocation
and authority has greatly stifled service delivery imperatives ie social housing
provision (von Holdt 2010) Undoubtedly the role of policy towards addressing issues
such as housing and service delivery is a significant one (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert
2011) this will be discussed further in chapter four
228 The role and significance of community public participation in hostel conversion to
family unitrsquos projects
Public participation in any context is a complex and at times a contentious exercise
Academic literature on community public participation tends to presuppose an
experience or existence of informal unambiguous or authentic relations in
community participation processes (Mdunyelwa 2015) This particularly in housing
related projects and programmes with the assumption that if all the stakeholders
involved are consulted the process of participation is likely to yield positive results and
success (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) In South Africa the notion of public
Page | 36
community participation has gained popularity as a democratic practice essential
for development and nation-building (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their research project entitled ldquoA
Case Study of participation in the City Deep Hostel Redevelopmentrdquo suggests that
there are more complex and less diffused forces at play According to Benit-Gbaffou
and Mathoho (2010) the central question often becomes when and at what point
can one say people have effectively or meaningfully participated This question is
especially relevant and significance to hostel conversion projects and to efforts to re-
configure hostels as lsquofamily units suitable for family lifersquo (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010) According to state policy the hostel conversion redevelopment approach is
and has been a nation-wide intervention initiated by the post-1994 government to
redevelop convert hostels in efforts to de-stigmatise these historically-laden spaces
(Dyiki 2006) Moreover the current Minister of Human Settlement has of late stated
on a number of media platforms the hostel conversion approach also seeks to
rehabilitate these historically single-sex migrant labour compounds into family
apartmentsunits to promote a family-oriented setting (Sisulu 2015) According to a
2001 text by Statistics South Africa ldquoconverted or upgraded hostels should be treated
in the same way as a block of flats and each unit considered as a separate housing
unitrdquo (Statistics South Africa Census2001 3)
The importance and usefulness of public community participation in hostel
conversion projects have been a widely and overly debated topic However this
does not wholly take away from the fact that there are many and varied obstacles
and challenges when it comes to the actual practice and experience of
participation on the ground (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) Even while the political
and socio-economic contexts of every project are varied with different structures and
the coordination of stakeholders take on different forms (Mdunyelwa 2015) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) argue that participation has often become a political
process riddled in processes of negotiation and rampant differences of opinion
coupled with a mix of personal andor political ambitions (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010)
Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their study of the City Deep Hostel
Redevelopment Project outlined a number of issues which the project encountered
before during and after the hotel redevelopment project there included
Page | 37
Before the redevelopment process
Managing change while also trying to mitigate violence the unauthorised
occupation of tenants wanting to gain the benefits of the redevelopment project
and the allocation of units (as a contentious challenge) were cited as challenges
encountered before the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
During the process
Challenges around the design of the units (limitations and constraints with respect to
skills time and finances) the issue of labour the provision of public and social
facilities services (ie cregraveches play areas for the children) were cited as being
encountered during the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
Issues after the project
Tariff rates (with electricity as one of the biggest concerns) along with the
disagreement and discontentment around rental payments were cited as the
challenges which were encountered post the hostel redevelopment process A
central question and concern that arose focused on whether the hostel did not just
became a renovated workersrsquo hostel or if it actually did change into actual family
units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
With the study area for this research in mind I am left wondering if the issues identified
by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) are unique to the City Deep contextproject
or are they to some extent representative and reverberate to the broader
challenges and limitations of hostel conversion projects across the country Certainly
there is some value to participation when it comes to hostel conversion
redevelopment but the process of participation particularly within the context of
hostels as politically and socio-economically volatile environments will most likely be
confronted by sturdy issues of inherent sensitivities and nuances (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010) This is what Mdunyelwa (2015) decisively refers to as binary cultural
political and social structures alluding to the sentiment that some hostel dwellers are
in some respect men and women of two minds set free from the physical shackles of
oppression yet still sadly unable and ill-equipped to live and transform their thinking
well beyond that (Mdunyelwa 2015)
Page | 38
23 Conclusion
Typically the body of work that exists on hostels is unambiguously and largely
concentrated on the historically-laden context of hostels It especially articulates
issues of violent conflict and tension within hostels and their surrounding areas
Conflict situations are often captioned as hostel versus township lsquowarsrsquo There is an
important political backdrop to this which relates to the rural urban links made
mention of in this chapter
Furthermore the poor living conditions of hostels the inadequate provision of services
and social amenities should be considered The loss of family life and the sense that
hostels pose as limited spaces which is a negative reflection on to dignity of its
inhabitants are some of elements associated with the stigma of hostel life (Bonner
and Nieftagodien 2012 Ramphele 1993) This has to quite a significant extent
remained a present-day and associated reality of the hostel setting and has posed
vast challenges to hostel conversion redevelopment projects
This chapter has argued that the landscape of hostels has by and large remained
complex at times perplexing and highly contentious As a resultant the wicked
consequences of the hostel system have been many and varied but all of which
warrant due attention The theoretical backdrop on hostels has been useful in
developing themes that resonate with the case study Sethokga hostel Of particular
relevance to the case study will be role and significance of community public
participation in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Highlighting some of the
issues encountered before and during the project as the project has not yet been
completed Certain aspects of the discussion on key concepts theories arguments
and ideas and how they resonate with the case study will be explored further
Particularly the notion of bedhold the aspect of men and housing the stigma of
hostel life and the resultant consequences of the hostel system will be critically
discussed in chapter five which examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project
Page | 39
Introducing Sethokga hostel
3 Introduction
In addition to the study area this chapter will in greater detail describe and locate
Sethokga hostel It examines its local as well as municipal context and presents a
visual narrative of the hostel The aim of the visual narrative is to provide the reader
with a lsquosensersquo of the physical setting of the hostel thus to provide the reader with a
visual depiction of the multifaceted circumstance of the hostel and the complex
challenges in which its residents endure Chapter three largely seeks to provide the
reader with an impression of the context in which the Sethokga hostel conversion
project is taking place
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)
In the period between 1890 and the late 1920s Ekurhuleni (at the time referred to as
the East Rand region of the Transvaal Province) experienced increased numbers of
black male workersmigrants This was as a result of a surge in the gold mining sector
which took place on the Witwatersrand gold reefs (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
According to Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) of the 15 000 workers that were
employed in the sector some 5 000 worked in what is now called the Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality With time the number of workers in the Ekurhuleni area
continued to rise considerably most of who were oscillating migrants who were either
accommodated in labour compounds such as hostels or shanty settlements in
townships across Ekurhuleni such as Tembisa Duduza Tsakane Kwa-Thema and so
forth (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) also argue that for most of the period of the
booming mining sector in the Witwatersrand reef to well into the countryrsquos
democratic dispensation political contention in hostels had long been a common
feature throughout the region As a consequence hostels and a number of the
townships in Ekurhuleni have somewhat continued to exist within a circumstance of
deep-seated antagonistic political and socio-economic conditions (Bonner and
Nieftagodien 2012)
Sethokga hostel is one of the largest hostels in the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan region
according to the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis Study in 2014 there
Page | 40
were approximately 12 120 residents living in the hostel (Demacon 2014) Of that
roughly 4 000 have since the beginning of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
been relocated or reallocated within other blocks in the hostel to make way for the
construction of the family units (Demacon 2014) Some of the relocations of residents
have been to alternative sites outside the hostel to either Enhlanzeni hostel or
Vusimuzi hostel both situated in the Tembisa area (Demacon 2014)Interestingly
Enhlanzeni as well as Vusimizi hostels are also experiencing issues of overcrowding
poor living conditions and similar socio-economic conditions to Sethokga Moreover
neither Enhlanzeni nor Vusimuzi hostel have or are undergoing upgrading
conversion It was not clear in the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis
Study what the reasons for relocating the residents of Sethokga to these hostels were
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni hostel and
Vusimuzi hostel
Source Demacon 2014
Page | 41
311 Geographic description of the study
Sethokga hostel was built in 1980 and much like other hostels across the country the
Sethokga hostel was badly designed poorly built and has been suffering years of
neglect Sethokga hostel is a public sector type hostel and is owned by the
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Sethokga was built to accommodate male
migrant labourers from a range of industries (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Similar to
numerous other hostels men could live in the hostel so long as they had work in
industries but wives partners and families were prohibited from residence (Thurman
1997) They were entitled only to short-term visiting permits Regular and violent raids
which were carried out by authorities during the day and at night would rigorously
enforce these regulations to chase away arrest or bus back the wives partners and
families of the men back to the homelands (Thurman 1997)
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi initially the hostel
accommodated a lsquomixturersquo of residents black men across all tribes and ethnicities
but he recalls the change that occurred in the 1990s in response to political shifts He
recalls that ldquoafter the release of Mandela and when they started preaching lsquothis
thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions happened according to who was Zulu or
Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Below the ward
councillor explains what he saw as some of the factors that led to what is currently
the strong predominance of Pedi and Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel
suggesting that ldquoThere were mixed feeling when talks were rife concerning
negotiations that could lead to possible elections because the IFP (Inkatha Freedom
Party) was rejecting such a notion At the time it was a situation of the Zulursquos terrorizing
the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa and standing with the white man The
Zulursquos did not like such an idea which caused a divide among the Zulu and Xhosa
This led to conflict between the Xhosa and the Zulu There was fighting everywhere in
the country and you found some Pedis Venda and Tsongarsquos ran away from certain
hostels because they were being chased out and some landed up in Sethokga (
Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) The points made by Cllr Mohlapamaswi flag some
interesting points for instance that this hostel in some respect played the role of a
place of refuge and might affect how residents view it
Sethokga hostel is situated on approximately 22 hectares of land and consists of 29 U-
shaped single and two storey dormitories but mainly consists of the two storey walk-up
dormitories (Demacon 2014) The hostel lies on medium dolomitic soil despite this it
has been said and reported that over the years this has not had a significant impact
Page | 42
on much of the structural qualities of the hostel (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) The
structural sturdiness of the hostel is said to have been mitigated through precautions
such as drainage and the assembly of lsquowellrsquo positioned pavements (Demacon 2014)
According to the ward councillor there are a few women and children living in the
hostel although it is not quite clear how many They are however not recognised as
lsquolegitimatersquo residence of Sethokga (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Arguably a
number of the hostel redevelopment conversion projects that have taken place
across the country have been as a response to the prevailing presence of women
and children who had come to live in the hostel The fact that this hostel has
remained predominantly male occupied presents a number contextual dimensions
to the hostel conversion project This will be explored in chapter five which will
examine the conceptualisation of the hostel conversion project
According to Thurman (1997) it is not uncommon in hostels for up to three families to
live in one room measuring 20 square metres Such rooms were designed to
accommodate two to three workers or even up to twenty people to share a sink a
shower and toilet (Thurman 1997) Yet lsquowholersquo families ie husbands wives children
or extended families have not moved into Sethokga Overcrowding remains a
concern and privacy is scarce in the hostel (Demacon 2014) The dormitories have
very limited physical space and little room for manoeuvre The typical floor plan of a
hostel is provided on the next page and depicts the rigid rudimentary and restrained
design of the hostel compound Sethokga hostel has identical floor plans and
elevations
Page | 43
Floor plan of a typical dormitory compound
Source Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
Figure 1 Ground Floor Plan
Figure 2 First Floor Plan
Figure 3 Elevation
Page | 44
312 Locality
The hostel is situated in the East Rand region of the Gauteng province within the
municipal administrative jurisdiction of the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (EMM)
in the Kempton Park ndash Tembisa Customer Care Area It is located in the north-eastern
region region B of the EMM in the township of Tembisa and lies to the south of the
Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and to the east of the City of Johannesburg
Moreover the hostel is lies between the Kempton Park Pretoria railway link near
Oakmoor station thus a multipurpose and inter-as well as intra-regional public
transport node It is well serviced in terms of public transport and easily accessible
from the R21 (Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
Map 2 Locality map
Source Google maps 2015
Source EkurhuleniGIS 2015
Page | 45
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex
313 Local and municipal context
Tembisa is one of the largest townships in the metro and it is situated in region A of the
EMM towards the north-western end of the municipality The hostel lies in ward four of
the metro to the east of Midrand and to the west of one of the most affluent suburbs
in region A Glen Marais along with other high income areas such as Serengeti Golf
Estate Midstream and the suburb of Edenvale (Demacon 2014)
The Integrated Development Plan (IDP) for the Oakmoor area Area 19 of the metrorsquos
Local Integrated Development Plan (LIDP) was last prepared in 2000 The report
contained among its leading aims to establish an integrated framework to guide and
facilitate development interventions in the area (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000) It was documented in the report that the SDP would guide the
Page | 46
municipalityrsquos decisions in the development and management of the area in a way
that the report articulates as follows by encouraging and setting the framework for
private sector investment and initiatives and by seeking to strengthen economic
activity in the area through the identification of specific projects and programmes
which would kick-start development and lastly working towards improving service
delivery (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) The report reviews the
historically context of the area and argues that basically no provision was made for
service delivery or the adequate management of land and no consideration of land
use imperatives was given This was the case throughout the Tembisa Township (SJN
Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Furthermore the report established that the general land-use pattern across most of
the township was mainly comprised of residential developments It was in this 2000
Integrated Development Plan that it was overtly and in retrospect alluded to that
Tembisa had been established to function at that time as a dormitory settlement for
the neighbouring economic centres of the East Rand region such as Kempton Park
Olifantsfontein and Midrand (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
An abstract in 2000 SDF report(SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000 stated
the following that investigations had confirmed that the Sethokga hostel buildings
were structurally sound except for some weather proofing of external walls and basic
finishes to walls floors and ceiling Some repair work to cracks and precautions to pre-
empt future cracking may be necessary but the hostel blocks would offer little
difficulty in terms of conversion into single and family units According to the report
there seemed to be more problems with engineering services For example the
internal sewer reticulation was said to be so dilapidated that it may have needed to
be replaced entirely Parts of the water supply network would need to be replaced
fire hydrants installed electricity supply upgraded and grading of roads and storm-
water disposal required substantial attention (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
When the completed report was presented in 2000 it set out a case that the
municipality was currently negotiating with a non-profit organisation to acquire hostel
land and convert the hostel buildings into single and family units and manage such
housing stock (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) It further documented
that the lsquoultimatersquo number of dwelling units would be about 1200 with the first phase
of development to deliver 500 units The report suggested that the development
would be undertaken by an external organisation and that few planning guidelines
Page | 47
would need to be proposed to harmonize Sethokga hostel residential complex with
the rest of the Tembisa Township In the report it is assumed that the hostel conversion
would should result in a lsquosecurity complexrsquo type of housing development and
access to the complex would be gained mainly from local distributors such as the
extension of MbizaIzimbongi Street and Nyarhi Street (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000)
The report argued for change in the household profile of the hostel and this would
result in an increased demand for additional social facilities such as schools cregraveches
churches libraries play area(s) etc It was found in the report that space intensive (in
terms of size) social facilities eg cregraveches and a multipurpose centre should be
encouraged within the complex (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Additionally limited retail specifically corner shops should be established within the
complex Lastly the report suggested that it was important to align the services in the
area with the rest of the EMM and ensure adequate capacity at points where the
services connected into the hostel Roads in particular were highlighted as important
in this regard to ensure continuity and appropriate distribution of traffic movement
What is more the report states that traffic should be discouraged within the new
settlement (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
The SDF marked the entire Sethokga hostel complex as lsquohostel upgradingrsquo married to
public open space within the vicinity of the complex churches sports fields and
mixed use areas were proposed in the SDF (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
Page | 48
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework (SDF) 2000
The development proposals in the 2000 Oakmoor area19 SDF proposed that Sethokga hostel be
Redeveloped into family units The SDF also proposed mixed use nodal developments within and around
the Oakmoor area and proposed additional facilities such as cregraveches schools and recreational
facilities in certain areas
Source SJN Development Planning Consultants Planning Area 19 Oakmoor Development
Plan Development Proposals Final Report 2000
This SDF for the area is quite old and has not been updated
since this 2000 plan
Sethokga
hostel
Page | 49
There are 22 hostels across Ekurhuleni which are spread across six regions in the metro
(Demacon 2014) Region A has two hostels of which one is government owned
region B has three hostels of which government owns two regions C D and E hosts
one hostel respectively while region F has sixteen hostels (it is not clear how many are
owned by government) (Demacon 2014)
In terms of social facilities and amenities the study area is situated within a 3km radius
from two schools Rabasotho Combined School and Philena Middle School It is also
within a 2km radius from a healthcare facility - Esselen Park Satellite Clinic - and within
a 1km radius from a sporting facility - Esselen Park Sports School of Excellence
(Demacon 2014) The nearest police station is roughly 6km away and a lsquogenerousrsquo
number of shopping as well as entertainment centres are found within a 15 to 20km
radius of the hostel The nearest taxi route is less than 100m with the nearest train
stations including the Tembisa Limindlela and Kaalfontein stations all falling within a
10km radius (Demacon 2014)
In 2013 the Tembisa economy contributed 83 to the overall economy of the EMM
whilst Ekurhuleni contributed 253 to the overall economy of the Gauteng province
in 2013 (Demacon 2014) Sethokga hostel forms part of the Kempton Park Tembisa
precinct and according the Sethokga Hostels Mixed Typology Market Analysis Report
it falls within the development context of the Kempton Park Tembisa precinct It hosts
a range of housing typologies supported under various housing programmes
(Demacon 2014) which include but are not limited to Informal Settlement Upgrading
programmes and projects Integrated Residential Development Programmes(s) and
Gap Market Housing Units According to this report there also exists several
opportunities for the development of medium to higher density residential
developments (Demacon 2014) The EMMs 2010 Metropolitan Spatial Development
Framework suggests that among the several intentions of the metro the EMM will seek
to expand the affordable housing market and that it will seek to accommodate a
wider range of the metrorsquos populace by making a range of housing options available
for people across different income groupings (Demacon 2014)
This next section exhibits the lsquoambiencersquo of Sethokga hostel as it currently stands It
delves into some detail regarding the current setting of the hostel and takes the
reader through the authorrsquos experience being in the hostel and lsquotravellingrsquo through its
narrow corridors It shares my experience of going into this dauntingly male
dominated environment riddled with metaphorical tones of disempowerment
despondency and neglect All the images displayed here were taken by the author
Page | 50
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel
In terms of its infrastructure the hostel is said to still be somewhat structurally sound
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005) Aesthetically however it appears quite old and rundown
and leaves a lot to be desired The neglected state of refuse and rubble removal
adds to the wear and tear appearance of the hostel Each of the blocks that make-
up the hostel consists of separate dormitories and entry into each dormitory is gained
through a common access point - a door - that leads into a communal area with a
basic cooking and dining area There are no ceilings in any of the dormitories The
paint-work both inside and outside has long worn out In general the hostel appears
especially dull and unsightly
321 Built form architecture
Figure 4
The hostel is old and run-down
The adjoining hostel blocks are lined with a
number of lsquoinformalrsquo traders
This area that leads into one of the hostel
blocks is where a resident displays his goods
for selling
Page | 51
A number of the men have cars which they
park in their respective blocks
Walk-up that leads into one of the dorms
that is later photographed and shows the
condition of the interior of the hostel
The hostel is in an obvious state of neglect
and refuse removal is ignored
I spotted a number of chickens roaming about
in the hostel and a small vegetable garden
near one of the entrances into a dorm
There is one entry and exit point into most of
the blocks in the hostel
Page | 52
Figure 5
This is a communal cooking area It was said
that because the stove is so old and has a
number of issues the electricity powering the
stove is never turned off and so it runs
constantly through the day and night time
The area next to the cooking area is where
groceries and other goods are stored for
safe-keeping
This communal dining area also leads into
the rest of the dorm and the place where the
hostel dwellers sleep
None of the dorms have ceilings or any
added furnishings (ie lighting) The hostel
has never been re-painted or renovated
since it was built in the early 1980s
Page | 53
This corridor leads into the bedrooms where
the men sleep Sheets andor curtains lead to
what felt like very restricted distressing and
unpleasent living quarters
The compartments offer very limited room to
move around and offer little privacy There
are two beds per compartment with up to
three people sharing a bed The living
conditions are as what Ramphele (1993)
described as constraining to varying degrees
since it is a physically restricted environment
with blurred boundaries of personal private
space The physical proximity to others offers
practically no prospect for privacy or liberty
to accommodate visitors
Page | 54
Figure 6
322 Municipal amenities
Male urinal
Communal toilet
Communal shower
Most of the hostel blocks in the hostel have
electricity yet it seems to be offered for
free
The entrance (door) leading to the one
communal shower and toilet facility There is
one bathroom per dorm
Page | 55
Figure 7
323 The adjoining area
Most of the blocks in the hostels have
communal indoor as well as outdoor taps
with running water provided without
charge
lsquoInformalrsquo activity trade takes place in
and around the hostel
The council offices are situated adjacent to
one of the hostel blocks across the street
The municipality does not collect refuse in
the hostel so it is up to the hostel residents to
dispose of their refuse (it was not clear why
the municipality did not collect refuse in the
hostel)
Page | 56
According to the (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) entry and access to the hostel are
determined by ones ability to negotiate for a bed Much like what was described by
Ramphele (1993) the closest likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo in hostels was in the form
of a bed this persists at Sethokga To some extent every aspect of life and survival in
Sethokga revolves around a bed
One gains entry into Sethokga through a block chairperson (Sololo interview 2015)
Some of the functions and responsibilities of these block chairpersonrsquos is to know what
is happening in that particular hostel block The illustration given by the economic
representative for the ward Mr Sololo was that
ldquoWhatever which has been happening in a particular block the chairperson
should be aware of it and should call a meeting Letrsquos say if you are sitting in a
block here and you have got a jukebox and you find that you are selling
liquor and now they tell you that by 10 orsquoclock you close down and the music
should be off Then you do not comply with that the block chairperson will
report you to the hostel committee and they will sit and come up with a fine
for you if you do not listen even after they fine you they will chase you out of
the hostelrdquo
According to Sololo interview (2015) the block chairpersons maintain peace and
order and need to ensure that any conflict is mediated They are elected by the
residents of a given block and are entrusted with their grievances Ideally they should
be first point of contact before anything is to be escalated to the ward councillor ie
if a pipe bursts and they are without water This would need to be reported to the
EMM by either the block chairperson and if the problem remains unresolved it is then
escalated to the ward councillor (Sololo interview 2015)
33 Conclusion
Chapter three has explored a number of elements which model the status quo of the
study field Ironically the conditions in the hostel are not much different to many of
the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg Sethokga hostel also resembles
many other hostels across the country The hostel is overcrowded there is little room
to manoeuvre and there is an obvious lack of privacy The hostel is a possible health
hazard to those who live in it
Page | 57
This chapter shared some of my own experience of the hostel My experience consisted out
of being in the hostel taking photographs in and around the hostel and engaging with the
living environment Inside the hostel I was engulfed by its narrow poorly lit and what felt like
stifling corridors Corridors divided by curtains and sheets led into what were very confined
sleeping compartments Beds offer a place of rest for those who have voluntarily or
involuntarily sought refuge in the hostel Many after all consider the hostels as a lsquobetterrsquo
alternative to homelessness The experience for me was unlike any I have ever felt since the
circumstance of my life has provided a certain comfort that was surely challenged in the
modest time that I spent at Sethokga Chapter four examines what has been the states
approach to hostel conversion
Page | 58
The statesrsquo approach to hostel conversion
4 Introduction
The discussion in this chapter will reflect and review South African state policy post-1994
that concerns hostels Chapter four will also critically discuss and describe the
fundamentals of what have been considered two of the leading approaches to hostel
redevelopment conversion namely the Hostel Redevelopment Programmes (HRP) and
the Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach
There have been a number of state interventions post-1994 that have seemingly been a
lsquosignrsquo of governments lsquodesirersquo to improve the living conditions of not just hostel residents
but of a vast majority of South Africanrsquos who were subjected to poor living conditions
(Thurman 1997) However for the purpose of this study there will be particular focus on
interventions around hostels In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005) concur with a few
other authors that during post democracy the South African government introduced
along with other housing programmes a hostel upgrading conversion programme
aimed primarily at converting hostels into integrated family-oriented developments
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
South Africarsquos housing policy was launched in 1994 and the housing subsidy scheme
promised to deliver one million houses in five years (UrbanLankMark 2011) This would be
delivered through a range of subsidy mechanisms (UrbanLankMark 2011) According to
Dyiki interview(2015) in 1995 or about 1996 a National Hostel Redevelopment Policy was
approved and was among one of the primary national housing programmes (Dyiki
interview 2015) To facilitate nation-building and effective state formation it was believed
that social programmes such as state funded housing programmes would play a pivotal
role in this regard (Netshitenzhe 2011) Moreover the nation-building agenda saw the
government set the country bold and far-reaching goals and these somewhat became
associated with certain policies ideologies and norms (Netshitenzhe 2011) However
redundant budgetary rituals inadequate feasibility studies weak project evaluation
bureaucratic inefficiency managing community expectations and political interference
have been some of the issues that have held back progress (von Holdt 2010 and
Pienaar 2010) As a result housing provided by government has often been poorly
Page | 59
located and in some respect it has continued to perpetuate a reality of spatial
segregation (Charlton et al 2014)
This next section will describe how the hostel conversion approach has been articulated
through state policy through subsequent grants and schemes
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach
Through the provision of grants and schemes government has made efforts to provide
funding for the redevelopment conversion of hostels However there has been
somewhat of a bias on public sector hostels as the grants are provided mainly for the
redevelopment conversion of hostels owned by municipalities or provincial government
(Department of Human Settlements 2015) In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
provide a synopsis of some of governmentsrsquo earliest approaches to addressing lsquothe hostel
issuersquo (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) This is summarised as follows
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Peoples Housing Process
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme (this will be discussed in
section 42)
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Arguably the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units
Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of state efforts to grapple with the vast
challenges around hostels hostel life and the social ills that have become endemic to
hostels (Dyiki 2006) The essence of the approaches listed below was that hostels would
be redeveloped converted to create sustainable human living conditions To re-
integrated these hostel communities into the surrounding township communities (Pienaar
and Cloete 2005)
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership was premised on
the notion that Developers this could also include the municipality would be able to
submit project proposals for the development of housing on stands that were serviced for
people who qualified in terms of eligibility criteria eg a combined household income of
Page | 60
the beneficiary versus the available subsidy amount provided by the state Households
would then be required to contribute to the development (that is the construction of their
house) from their own savings or through what was referred to as lsquosweet equityrsquo
(providing their own material and labour) Locational and geographic factors would also
affect the amount of the subsidy by 2005 Pienaar and Cloete (2005) noted that this
subsidy had delivered an approximate 13 million homes which were primarily low-cost
free-standing
In the case of hostels redevelopment one option was that the subsidy could be used to
build new free-standing dwellings for individual full title ownership on unused portions of
land within hostel complexes This option would require sub-division of the land as well as
the installation of additional service Under the provisions of the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme another option would be to convert existing dormitories into family
apartments that could be sold off to beneficiaries under sectional title This sectional title
is a form of ownership where an individual holds title to a dwelling unit it can be a free-
standing unit or part of a multi-unit storey building The individual owns title together
with all the other owners of sectional dwellings on that property an undivided share of the
land on which the dwellings are built (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) However the challenge
was that where existing dormitories were converted and sold under title the projects
would be exposed to a host of problems that sectional title properties generally
encountered in low-income areas in the private sector ie poor management and
maintenance and difficulties in collecting levies and service debts (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process
The Peoplersquos Housing Process was reportedly introduced to enable communities
particularly those in disadvantaged areas to participate in the provision of their own
housing without the participation interference or involvement of private developers
However technical and administrative support and consultation would be offered by
Housing Support Organisations which were approved to serve this function (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005) What were termed as facilitation grants would be made available by the
government to lsquokick-startrsquo the housing projects The beneficiaries could apply for a grant
to pay for the services rendered by the Housing Support Organisation(s) and the housing
subsidy would be the same as for what was contained in the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) hostel residents could as a
community collective make use of this avenue as a means of obtaining ownership of an
improved residence with the assistance of their local authority a non-governmental
Page | 61
organisation (NGO) or perhaps a cluster of professions who could provide support and
administrative assistance as their Housing Support Organisation (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing was introduced in 1995 and was essentially a
variant of the project-linked subsidy provided to non-profit institutions independent of
government and registered as legally approved entities Households earning less than
R3500 per month would be provided through this subsidy with subsidised rental housing
by these entities In 1995 when the subsidy was introduced it carried a once-off capital
grant of R16 000 per dwelling but by 2002 the amount had increased to R27 000 as part of
the governmentrsquos aspiration to promote medium density housing Pienaar and Cloete
(2005) note that because the hostel redevelopment programme had been in limbo for
several years at the time of their study the Institutional Subsidy approach had been
considered as a viable alternative to accelerate hostel conversion projects The tenure
options under this subsidy it was proposed would include
Rental
Co-operative ownership
An instalment sale option in the form of a lsquorent to buyrsquo practice with a
minimum rental period of four years to qualify for the conversion to ownership
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Under the National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
the National Housing Code (for subsidised housing) delineates subsidised housing as
Permanent residential structures that have security of tenure both internal
and external privacy
Housing that has portable water serviced with adequate energy and sanitary
facilities
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing were set
to give effect to the objectives of the Housing Act 1997 which came into effect on 1 April
Page | 62
1998 To ensure quality and durable housing products that complied with particular
minimum standards (National Housing Report 2009) For instance dwellings had to have
a minimum gross floor area of 30m2 but this has since been amended (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005)
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country
Some international interest has been generated to consider intervention in hostels and
efforts to redevelopingconverting hostels The point of this section is to illustrate that
hostels occupied and in some respect have continued to occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are one of many representations of
the physical manifestation of three centuries of systematic racial discrimination and
economic exploitation (Thurman 1997) The consolidation of the migrant labour system
through hostels the poor living conditions of hostels the dishonour of hostel life and the
control they exert on the African populace Saw hostels gaining the attention of a
number of international agencies and authorities who put resources towards and took an
interest in reconfiguring the disposition of hostels (Dyiki interview 2015)
In the period between August 2002 and April 2003 the USAID (United States Agency for
International Development) extended its support to community based approaches to
housing in South Africa and in turn created a platform where it would have input(s) into
South Africarsquos national housing policy (Urban Sector Network 2003)
Hostel redevelopment was supported under a grant provision provided by the USAID this
had two main objectives The first was that policy and information dissemination should
serve as key objectives and secondly that USAID would have a voice in the facilitation of
hostel redevelopments Initially the grant was meant to run from 23 August 2000 to 30
August 2002 but an extension was requested and the grant extended for the period 1
September 2002 to 30 April 2003 (Urban Sector Network 2003) Additionally the on-goings
of the programme instituted under the grant were to include the following activities
Identifying and conducting research into tenure options and feasible
management models for hostels
Identifying possible needs and challenges and to then conduct nation-wide
research in the hostel sector
Facilitating workshops and consolidating policy submissions and to submit
research papers to the Department of Housing
Page | 63
To publish research papers
To conduct mid-term and final evaluation of the programme
Conducting information outreaches where the USN (Urban Sector Network) would
play an essential role in informing government the private sector as well as
communities about the opportunities which could be created through the
redevelopment of hostels (Urban Sector Network2003)
The Urban Sector Network (USN) then proceeded to make specific recommendations on
the hostel redevelopment approach The USN called for the broadening on the scope of
the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme to include all hostels (private and
grey sector) and not just public sector hostel Recommendations were made that the
norms and standards for the redeveloped hostels should be developed along with
national guidelines for the management of redeveloped hostels by local authorities They
advocated for stronger support for co-operative housing The redevelopment of hostels
to be approached in an integrated and holistic manner and hostels should not be
redeveloped in an isolated manner The subsidy amount for hostels redevelopment and
social facilitation needed to be increased Lastly that hostels redevelopment should
support livelihood strategies and capacity building and training of hostel residents during
the redevelopment process was essential (Urban Sector Network 2003)
The USN proposed a departure from the public sector hostel redevelopment bias of the
Hostel Redevelopment plan (Urban Sector Network 2003)
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme (HRP)
In principal the Hostel Redevelopment Programme supported an unambiguous bias in
favour of public sector hostels (Dyiki 2006) Public sector hostels are those hostels
owned by either provincial or local authorities that offered accommodation to workers
from a range of industries (Thurman 1997) Grey sector hostels (in which the structures
wereare owned by private companies but the land by a provincial or local authority
and private sector hostels) did not form part of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme
(Dyiki 2006) The biggest limitation and challenge of the HRP was in its narrow focus on
solely the conversion of hostels beds (Thurman 1997) The aim of the HRP was to provide
a subsidy allocation that was based per bed but it was criticised as being impractical
and unfeasible and not adequately addressing the issue of housing provision (Dyiki
2006) Dyiki interview (2015) believes that the challenge of the HRP was that it was not
talking to individuals but rather it was a subsidy given to the state to improve the hostel
and the standard of living in the hostel Since most of the public sector hostels were
Page | 64
managed by the municipalities the municipalities received the subsidy and the
residents of the hostels therefore had very little say in how the subsidy could in effect be
used The other challenge was that grey sector and public sector hostels were not part
of the subsidy (Dyiki interview 2015)
The Hostel Redevelopment Programme was perhaps the earliest strategy conceived by
the South African government as a national policy aiming to
Promote habitable and humane conditions in hostel conversions
Ensure the involvement of hostel residents the surroundingneighbouring
community and relevant (publicprivate) authorities and any other entity
affected by the project are involved in the decision-making processes
Facilitate and promote social integration within hostel communities and the
hostels and adjacent communities
Put measures in place to accommodate any persons displaced by the hostel
conversion project
Empower promote economic development and seeks to be development-
oriented
According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment
Programme was largely based on the premise that this programme would make some
provisions for grant funding from the central government towards the conversion or
upgrading of hostels particularly public sector or grey-sector hostels This will be done with
the broad aim of the programme to facilitate and create living conditions for residents
that are humane and hygienic by providing prospects for housing options that are
affordable and sustainable With tenure options for
Rental
Possible ownership for those at the lower income scale
Upon its conception a capital subsidy of R16 000 was initially proposed per family or R4
000 per individual Additionally to be eligible for this programme hostel redevelopment
programmes would need to be
Planned and implemented in a participative and comprehensive manner
with the requirement that interest groups would need to be established
Based on socio-economic studies undertaken to determine and consider the
needs and affordability aspect of those who would be affected (ie stand to
benefit from the project)
Page | 65
Unfailing in ensuring that there is no displacement of residents unless
alternative accommodation is provided
Sustainable with regards to the on-going payments of maintenance and any
other related costs
Purposeful to augment employment opportunities for the hostel residents as
well as the locals in the construction and on-going maintenance of the
project
The broad aim of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme (Mdunyelwa 2015) was to
convert these historically male-occupied spaces which were also subsequently meant
for migrant labourers to family units But it will be done in such a way to able and
capacitate the accommodation of the families of these men In some way but perhaps
not explicitly stated in the Hostel Redevelopment Programme policy brief there is an
element of urbanisation that is implied Therefore it was an attempt to somewhat
encourage the men to relocate their families from their rural home-base (Mdunyelwa
2015)
The shortcomings of the HRP in how it had a restricted focus on hostel beds and
somewhat of an oversight on the complexity of the configuration of hostels saw it being
replaced by the Community Residential Units Programme (CRU) (Pienaar 2010) Dyiki
interview (2015) in my interview with him argued that the CRU Programme unlike the HRP
contains a lot more detail that was perhaps missed in the HRP He further suggested that
the CRU Programme could be considered somewhat of a lsquocost recoveryrsquo strategy by
government to recoup some of the monies spent on these projects As the CRU
programme has a strong rental housing stock component to it (Dyiki interview 2015)
44 The Community Residential Units Programme (CRU Programme)
The Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme has since replaced the National
Hostel Redevelopment Programme At the time of this study there are approximately
2000 public hostels across the country with a vast majority of them still needing to be
afforded some attention and measures to redevelop them (Demacon 2014) According
to the Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the CRU Programme (2006)
the CRU Programme aims to facilitate the provision of secure and stable rental tenure for
lower income persons Furthermore stating that the programme seeks to provide a
framework for addressing the many and varied forms of existing public sector residential
accommodation as the previous approach under the HRP only considered a ldquoper-bedrdquo
Page | 66
approach that proved unfavourable on a number of occasions (CRU Programme Policy
Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme is believed to provide a lsquobetterrsquo suited programme and a coherent
framework to assist in dealing with a vast range of public stock which has for the most
part been indecisively and incomprehensively dealt with (Demacon 2014) The CRU
Programme targets low income individuals as well as households with an average R 3500
monthly income and who have not been able to find suitable accommodation
According to the CRU Programme in the years leading up to 2006 there was an
approximate 4512 of households nationally which fall within the R0-R800 income groups
currently renting and an approximate 4027 falling within the R801 ndash R3200 income
groups (CRU Programme Policy Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme intends to cover the following areas
a) Public hostels that are owned by Provincial Housing Departments and municipalities
b) ldquoGreyrdquo hostels which are hostel that have both a public and private ownership
component due to historical reasons
c) Public housing stock that forms part of the ldquoEnhanced Extended Discount Benefit
Schemerdquo but which cannot be transferred to individual ownership and has to be
managed as rental accommodation by the public owner
d) Post-1994 newly developed public residential accommodation owned by provincial
housing departments and municipalities
e) Existing dysfunctional abandoned andor distressed buildings in inner city or township
areas that have been taken over by a municipality and funded by housing funds
(Department of Human Settlements 2015)
The CRU programme policy document is quite a laborious document In general the CRU
programme seeks to promote and advance the provision of rental options for lower
income groups facilitate communication and participation of residents throughout the
process provide a variety of rental stock and provide secure and stable rental stock This
will be done by what the CRU Programme articulates as providing a realistic funding
programme (Department of Human Settlements 2015)
According to the CRU programme rental stock provided by the programme is to be
owned by either a provincial housing department or a municipality However this has
been a seriously contested position on the part of the individuals and households
affected by the programme who want home ownership (Dyiki interview 2015)
Page | 67
45 Conclusion
There have been a number of projects over the past several years which have in part
articulated the states aspiration to reconfigure the lsquoway of lifersquo in hostels The Hostel
Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units Programme are
considered to have been the leading approaches to reconfiguring hostels within the
countryrsquos broader landscape Whether hostels have or do not have a place in
democratic South Africa is part of what this study is looking to explore
Chapter five introduces the Sethokga hostel conversion project and in principal seeks to
unpack the conceptualisation of the project while reflecting on the findings of the
interviews
Page | 68
The Sethokga hostel conversion project
5 Introduction
Chapter five will examine the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seek to unpack
how the project has been conceptualised Discussing the main components of the
project its main stakeholders the project phases exploring what are its defining
characteristics the broad vision and aim of the project how the project has understood
the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn set to address them and then also
in what way(s) the residents of the hostel have been involved in the project Furthermore
this chapter will examine what the project considers important in terms of gender issues
what have been some limitations of the project while it also considers what the
anticipated impact and benefit of the project is
Lastly and in view of the interviews that were conducted chapter five discusses how the
residents of the hostel and the community of Tembisa and greater Ekurhuleni will know
that the project has been completed and has been successful By and large this chapter
offers testament of the findings from the field work and reviews the rationale of the
Sethokga conversion project To conclude this chapter a collage of diagrams and
images will be presented to provide the reader with greater insight(s) into the Sethokga
hostel conversion project
51 Outline of the main components of the project
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project
There have been a number of stakeholders involved in the Sethokga hostel conversion
project the main stakeholders include
o The Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement (GPDHS)
o LTE Consulting
o The Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
o The ward councillor and various community committees and leaders
o The Sethokga Hostel residents
o The community of Tembisa
Page | 69
The roles of the stakeholders are summarised as follows National government is the key
funder of the Sethokga hostel conversion project the funds are transferred to the GPDHS
who have to then ensure that the costs of the project are managed LTE Consulting is a
consulting company appointed by the GPDHS for the oversight and construction of the
Sethokga hostel conversion project They work in collaboration with the EMM (the local
authority) and its various departments such as the services department the energy
department quality assurance etc However the GPDHS remains the lsquomain decision-
makerrsquo and lsquocustodianrsquo of the project with the lead oversight on the budget and
programmeproject management The project manager Mr Sisa Majikijela is the official
from the GPDHS that is directly responsible for supervision and coordination of the
project The ward councillor and the various community committees leaders facilitate
avenues of communication and engagement between the officials (from province the
EMM and LTE) with the residents of Sethokga and community lsquoAs the eyes and ears on
the groundrsquo (Majikijela interview 2015) ideally the ward councillor and various
community committees leaders have an important role to play in ensuring that the
Sethokga residents and community will be the rightful recipients of the project The
Sethokga hostel residents and broader community have a vested interest in the project
because it stands to affect andor benefit them (Sololo interview2015)
Once the project is completed with the family units fully constructed (ie with furnishings
such as trees plants parking bays and so forth) and the services installed The project will
be handed over to the EMM for on-going administration maintenance and the
collection of rentals (Shibambo interview 2015) The Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlement in collaboration with the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and LTE
Consulting play a key role as facilitates of the conversion of Sethokga hostel into family
units (Majikijela interview 2015)
522 Project phases
The data regarding the project phases was easily accessible and generously provided by
the consulting resident engineer and the architect providing me with a market analysis
study and a few other key documents The development concept of the hostel
conversion project divides the project into three phases and further subdivides each of
the phases into two phases phases A and B (Demacon 2014)
Initial studies (ie pre-feasibility studies) were done in 2008 but the demolition of the first
four blocks of the hostel demolished for the current phase 1A only took place in August of
2011 and it was anticipated that phase 1A would be completed and handed over to the
Page | 70
municipality by the end of 2014 but this did not happen (Majikijela interview 2015) At the
time of conducting fieldwork between the months of August and September 2015 it was
said that phase 1A was near completion with just the landscaping parking and water
provision left to completed (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
Phase 1A of the project was meant to bring to completion a total of 240 units
accommodating 1 194 people to provide 69 parking bays (one per four units) a total of
54 one bedroom units 117 two bedroom units and 69 three bedroom units at an average
unit size of 324m2 477m2 and 588m2 for the one two and three bedrooms respectively
(Demacon 2014) However only a total of 222 units have been built and this shortfall was
largely attributed to the underlying dolomite geological conditions of the site (Bako and
Shibambo interview 2015)
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
The Sethokga hostel conversion project has been administered under the CRU
programme and forms part of a national agenda to convert hostels into family units
(Dyiki interview 2015) The target group under the CRU programme is individuals and
households earning between R800 and R3 500 per month who are able to enter what the
CRU programme has termed the lsquoformal private rental and social housing marketrsquo
(Demacon 2014)
The new residential units (the family units) are situated on ervan 128 and 5729 of the
Sethokga complex within the administrative jurisdiction of the Kempton Park Customer
Care Area (CCA) which is the administrative body conducting oversight of development
and town planning affairs for the Tembisa and Kempton Park areas (Demacon 2014)
The family units are three storey walk-ups and appear somewhat spacious and far more
appealing than the hostel structures The CRU proposes that bachelorsone bedroom
units of 20m2 to 35m2 should be allocated at a monthly rental of R270 ndash R450 a two
bedroom unit of 35m2-45m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R450 to R850 and
that a three bedroom unit of 45m2-80m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R850 ndash
R1650 Rentals have been and remain a contestation in a number of hostel conversion
projects across the country and Sethokga is no different According to the economic
representative for the ward Sololo interview (2015) the residents of Sethokga hostel are
contesting that they want to pay R150 for a one bedroom unit R200 for a two bedroom
unit and R300 for a three bedroom unit
According to the principles of the CRU programme the ownership of the rental housing
stock is to be reserved by either the Gauteng Provincial Department of Human
Page | 71
Settlement (GPDHS) or the EMM The ownership of the family units can be transferred by
the GPDHS to the EMM in line with the Housing Act no right(s) of ownership can be
transferred to tenants (Pienaar 2010)
The process of the Sethokga hostel conversion has on an administrative and government
support level been facilitated through a grant allocation from national government to
province (GPDHS) This grant has made provisions for pre-feasibility studies
socialcommunity facilitation the relocationreallocation of some residents (within the
hostel or to alternative sites to make way for demolition and construction of phase 1A)
and the consideration and compensation of construction costs and professional fees
(Majikijela interview 2015) The allocation of the units determining rental structures
applying indigent relief measures where necessary rental collection and maintenance
as well as the management of the family units are factors determined by the GPDHS and
the EMM cooperatively (Sololo interview 2015) The hostel residents are then at some
level consulted and lsquoencouragedrsquo to participate in this regard (Dyiki interview 2015)
Seemingly throughout project implementation the stakeholders have been kept informed
of the status and progress of the project With respect to notifying the hostel residents and
general public notices are placed in and around the hostel to inform them of meetings
and the ward councillorrsquos office take the lead on this (Mthethwa interview 2015)
There have been a number of communitypublic meetings that have taken place as the
project has progressed From the fieldwork I was not able to draw on precisely how many
meetings had taken place since or precisely when the meetings took place or what was
discussed in each of those meetings Generally the ward councillor said at least once a
month a consultative and progress report meeting would take place between the
various stakeholders where officials would engage the hostel residents and general
public
According to Majikijela interview (2015) the ward councillor and the economic rep the
main area of involvement on the part of the hostel residents has been in providing
labour A small percentage of the residents have been involved in the construction-work
and some of the clerical work on the project Their involvement in discussions on the
project is said to often be arbitrarily halted by political interference (Sololo interview
2015) For instance Bako interview (2015) the architect recalled that on the design of the
family units Liefa Architects did not talk to the end user ie the residents to ask them
what they wanted Instead a design which was informed by other examples of similar
projects was presented to the residents of Sethokga and the general public (Bako
interview 2015) ldquoThe design of the hostel was not lsquoexclusiversquo to Sethokga and its contextrdquo
(Bako interview 2015)
Page | 72
In relation to the size of the hostel and its residents only a very small percentage of the
hostel residents have been employed in the project the December 2013 January 2014
labour records reported the following
Table 1
Total workforce 66
Females 7
Males 59
Youth 28
Adults 38
Semi-skilled 20
Skilled 22
Disabled 0
General workers 24
Source LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor report
I was fortunate to have attended one of the community meetings that were held at an
old community hall within the vicinity of the hostel This meeting took place on a
Saturday the 15th of August 2015 and it was quite the experience There was a relatively
strong police presence at the meeting The police kept watch and managed the
activities inside and outside the community hall As there were concerns that the
proceedings might get out of hand and a possible tussle between those in attendance
might arise The meeting was chaired by the ward councillor and aside from the residents
of Sethokga in attendance was one official from the GPDHS an official from the EMM
community leaders and ANC committee members
There was an obvious and overwhelming male presence in the meeting tempers ran
high and there was an observable resistance from the residents of Sethokga to the
presence of the three females in the meeting This included me and two female
committee members Several times the meeting was disrupted by shouts and echoes of
discontentment questioning what women were doing at a meeting for men lsquordquothey have
no place here they do not even live hererdquo were the words of some of the men Our
presence seemed to really infuriate some of the men This was similar to what Ramphele
(1993) Segal (1991) Thurman (1997) and Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) observed in
their work and suggested that even now and within the context of Sethokga that the
men in the hostel are still quite at odds with having women as a part of their lsquogathering of
Page | 73
menrsquo and possibly even living among them The demeanour of some of the men in this
meeting suggested that they found the presence and role of women in these meetings
unneeded It was evident that these men had become far too accustomed to living
lsquoalonersquo as men Ramphele (1993) noted that the idea of an unambiguous constant and
unrestricted presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a serious point
of contention for some of men Some men expressed unwillingness while others a
struggle to comprehend or endorse this change that seemed overly unfamiliar and
challenging to come to grips with (Ramphele 1993) From my observation in this meeting
the same seems to hold true for Sethokga
The purpose of the meeting was to consult the hostel residents who were identified to be
the first recipients beneficiaries of the allocating of family units to consult them on issues
of final rental proposals allocation processes and status of the project The invitation for
this meeting was apparently only extended to those particular individuals but
subsequently the meeting was taken over by those who had objections to the process of
allocation rentals and why the meeting sought to exclude them and divide the residents
Generally the meeting was unruly and the ward councillor as well as the community
leaders and committee members struggled to manage the crowd and the rampant
tempers in the room
The agenda for the meeting is provided below to provide the reader with some context
and outline of the intension of the meeting Unfortunately tempers ran especially high in
this meeting and in my opinion none of the items on the agenda were successfully
addressed
Page | 74
Figure 8 August 15 community meeting agenda
Source Sethokga Community meeting 2015
521 Broad vision and aim of the project
The vision and aim of the project was described by the key informants who to some
extent unanimously used the following key words integration sustainability community
participation to improve peoplersquos lives restoring honour addressing the ills of hostel life
and bringing families into a safe and secure environment The housing officer for me
captured well the overall sentiments of the key informants when he said ldquowe are
surrounded and have so many companies in Tembisa so clearly you will find letrsquos say a
white guy working in the area but then they travel to Kempton Park or some other area
outside Tembisa and that is where they live So it would be nice to see him living in
Sethokga The project is about integration and not just integrating the residents of
Page | 75
Sethokga to the rest of the township but other ways of integration like racial integration
That is what I want to seerdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015)
Additionally the broad vision and aim of the hostel conversion project is to instil a culture
of payment into not just the hostel but the broader community ldquoPeople cannot just keep
wanting everything for free government cannot afford itrdquo The interviewees that
expressed this position were Majikijela Sololo Mthethwa Dyiki Bako and Shibambo
Seemingly under the CRU programme the project would seek to influence and instil this
culture of payment through the rental housing stock focus of the programme That
largely seeks to promote government owned and managed rental housing stock a
departure from the lsquofreersquo housing approach (Bako interview 2015)
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga development
Source Liefa Architects 2015
Phase 1B Phase 2B Phase 3B
Phase 1A Phase 2A
Phase 3A
Page | 76
What was surprising to me was that the family units are not intended to be occupied by
current residents only The idea is that some of the current residents would live elsewhere
and when this question was posed to the official from the GPDHS Majikijelarsquos interview
(2015) response was that the hostel residents who did not qualify in terms of the required
criteria for the renting of the units would be allocated RDPs in the neighbouring area of
Esselen Park but he could not provide clarity as to how and when this would happen
The vision of Sethokga that can be seen from the plan provided below is a reconfigured
locality Rehabilitated single-sex compounds into self contained family units furnished
with child care facilities park(s) garden(s) a community centre recreation facilities and
parking areas
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn
set out to address those needs and challenges
Although the CRU Programme only sets particular administrative operational and
project facilitation guidelines Arguably these guidelines do in some respect address
a number of the ills associated with hostels such as the issue of overcrowding lack of
privacy and poor living conditions (Pienaar 2010) Within Sethokga there are
challenges of tribalism high prevalence of HIV drug abuse alcohol abuse
criminality overcrowding lack of privacy possible health hazards a lack of ablution
facilities The hostel being unsafe for women (especially those who are staying in the
hostel illegally) was identified and shared by the key informants as some of the major
challenges confronting the hostel This view was shared by the ward councillor the
housing officer from the EMM the project manager from the GPDHS the consulting
engineer and the wardrsquos economic representative
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi the issue of tribalism occurred
as a result of what he recalls as a defining political shift ldquoafter the release of Mandela
and when they started preaching lsquothis thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions
happened according to who was Zulu or Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Here the ward councillor explains what he saw as
some of the factors that led to what is currently the strong predominance of Pedi and
Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel suggesting that
ldquoThey were mixed here when they started talking about negotiations that
there must be elections and then the IFP (Inkatha Freedom Party) was
rejecting that and that had nothing to do with membership it was a situation
of the warlords the Zulursquos terrorizing the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa
Page | 77
and standing with the white man The Zulursquos did not like that so that is where
the Zulu and Xhosa divide started and that is when you found that in
Sethokga it became predominantly more Xhosa there was fighting and war
the Zulursquos were chasing people out of their territory at the other hostels The
Xhosarsquos ran to Sethokga There was fighting everywhere even here in
Sethokga and all over the Pedis Vendas Tsongarsquos they all ran away from
those hostels where they were being chased out and they came hererdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
It was unclear as to the extent to which the project dealt with any of these
challenges and how or if they were factored into the project The project seems to
have a general lsquobest practicersquo approach to hostel conversion irrespective of the
circumstance of a particular hostel
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project
ldquoThe political volatility of the project poses an enormous threat to the successful
allocationletting of the family unitsrdquo (Majikijela interview 2015) On the part of the
key informants their continued inability to answer the perhaps not so simple question
of what would happen to those who could not afford the monthly rental of the family
units This suggested that the issue of rentals has remained a grey area even as the
project heads towards project completion ldquoWe will worry about that when we get
thererdquo was the brisk response to my inquiry on this matter Similar to what was
observed by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in the City Deep Redevelopment
project Sethokga faces a similar challenge
Certainly public community participation in any context is a complex and at times a
contentious exercise (Mdunyelwa 2015) I remain hesitant whether the Sethokga
hostel conversion project has been able to lsquotrulyrsquo engage residents and the broader
community in a transparent and reciprocal manner Seemingly affordability will be
the determining factor of who will be able to rent a unit To those who cannot afford
it stands to be seen what remedy will be extended to them
Moreover the following factors were cited as some of the limitations of the project
the lack of transparency political interference an inadequate dissemination of
information to residentscommunity and the projects failure to respond to what the
solution(s) will be for lsquonon-qualifyingrsquo residents who cannot afford the monthly rentals
Page | 78
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful
I wanted to find out from the key informants particularly those who have been
directly involved in the conversion project what for them would constitute a
successful project and how from their point of view the residents and the greater
community would know that the project is completed and has been
successfulunsuccessful Overall the leading response was that a project would be
successful when the family units are occupied Some of the interviewees added that
the process of allocating the units and resolving the myriad of issues are most
certainly likely to cause further delays and will require intricate resolution (ie peoplersquos
unwillingness and otherrsquos inability to pay tension and opposition to paying rentals
opening the letting to tenants who are not hostel residents and so forth)
In summary the thoughts shared by the housing office at the EMM and the wardrsquos
economic representative capture in essence the general position held by every one
of the key informants
ldquoFor me a complete project will be the units functioning on their own and then
people will be told during a public meeting We also need to involve the mayor the
MECs and the media People will be told that it is finished and this is what is going to
happenrdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015) ldquoAfter it has been completed I want to see 80
percent of the people who have been staying in the hostel still residing in the hostel
It must not just be open to whomever There are people as far as Johannesburg who
want to stay here because they see it being comfortable and nice forgetting we are
looking to improve the lives of the current hostel dwellers There are even those in the
township who think that people of the hostel cannot pay so this is not for themrdquo
(Sololo interview 2015)
Page | 79
53 Visual narrative of the family units
531 Architectural designsplans
The design of the family units is what the architect referred to as a multi-storey approach
ldquoThe three storey walk-ups address the need for housing much better than an RDP wouldrdquo
(Bako interview 2015) They have an urban apartment-like feel about them but the
mundane (uniform) paintwork gives them a distinct government provided social housing feel
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development plan
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 80
Figure 12 Architects Section E - E
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 11 Architects Section F ndash F
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 13 South Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 81
Figure 14 North Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 15 East Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 16 West Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 82
532 The project site of family units
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site
View of the site of the family units from one of
the hostel blocks situated adjacent to the
construction site across the street
Construction of the family units
commenced in August of 2011
Site notice placed at the entrance of the
family units construction site
The Sethokga community hall situated at
the entrance to the family units
construction site and adjacent to the
council offices
Page | 83
For the most partthe construction of the
family units is nearing completetion
Walking through the site personally I felt that
the family units had a somewhat prominent
RDP lsquolookrsquo about them
Ground floor view
The entrance into the construction site of the
family units and the site office which is
situtated within the vicinity of the site
Page | 84
533 Inside the Family units
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units
Doorway into one of the three bedroom
family units which leads into an open plan
dining and kitchen area
Each unit has its own dining sitting and
kitchen area
The construction site is lsquopolicedrsquo by the Red
Ants (a private security company)around the
clock and also a private security company
Some of the security members seen on site
they insisted I take a picture of them to
include in this study
Page | 85
Built-in sink and geyser
The family
units offer a number of distinct qualities that
the hostel clearly does not have which
include privacy and a dignified living
environmentspace
Each unit has its bathroom with a built-in
toilet bath and shower
Shower
Separate and additional toilet as part of the
three bedroom family units
The diningsitting area and two adjacent
bedrooms
Page | 86
The site of the family units is being guarded by a private security company and members
of the Red Ants (a private security company) When asked about this the official (the
project manager overseeing the Sethokga hostel conversion project) from the GPDHS
said that this was necessary to ensure that no unauthorised occupations take place This
was also to guard against any possible vandalism or the looting of materialsequipment
or the site office (Majikijela interview 2015)
54 Summary of main themes and findings
This study had a number of themes which resonate with the case study The localised
context of Sethokga hostel offered great insights into the current state of hostels as
spaces and places that still largely exist within a context of volatility poor living conditions
and complex socio-economic challenges (Thurman 1997) The historic exploits on hostels
revealed and I suppose confirmed that the hostel system was established supported and
perpetuated by methodical policy and controls to discourage the permanent settlement
of Africans in urban areas or any intention of relocating their family to urban areas (Segal
1991) Furthermore within the contemporary South African context this has posed a
number of challenges and has been a longstanding reality of a number of hostel dwellers
as observed in the work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010)
The view from one of the family units (a ground
floor three bedroom unit) is onto the ward
councillorrsquos offices and the hostel in the
distance
One of the three bedrooms in the family
units
Page | 87
Sethokga hostel is also one of many hostels that exist within a historically-laden context
The strong prominence of Pedi and Xhosa native speaking men in some respect also
speaks to the events of circular migration that are still a lived-reality of the men of
Sethokga This according to the ward councillor has meant that the men have had to
maintain ties with their families in the Eastern Cape and Limpopo while most of them live
in Sethokga away from their families (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) In terms of gender
issues the aspect of men and housing the hostel conversion project does not adopt a
particular stand on this Seemingly the project makes no effort to appreciate the
apparent rural location of the wives partners children and families of a vast majority of
the men in Sethokga The idea is that anyone who is able to afford the monthly rental of
the family units can sign a lease agreement and rent a unit However this presents a
number of issues and leaves a lot unaccounted for and unanswered ie will the families
of the men in the hostels make a transition to join them in the family units Is this even a
possibility for them what impact would this have on the already stretched social
amenities in the area Arguably in the case of Sethokga this oversight has been a serious
area of contention and has amplified the political volatility of the project
The heavy-handedness of the hostel system cunningly imposed a sense of no escape
yet quite interestingly the later unwillingness to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have their
hostel converted into family units (Thurman 1997)
Among the key findings of the research report is that the lsquorental onlyrsquo tenure option and
approach to the hostel conversion project was the biggest challenge and one of the
most critical points of contention (Pienaar 2010) On the one hand the hostel residents
are arguing that they cannot afford the proposed rentals while on the other hand
officials are of the opinion that this is in fact untrue and not wholly representative of the
attitude(s) of all the hostel residents Thus a supposed unwillingness to pay and a culture
of entitlement was cited by the key informants as the underlying state of affairs and one
that posed the biggest threat to the project and in particular how the family units would
be allocated
Although the project is for the most part about converting Sethokga hostel into family
units in principal it is also about redress integration improving the living conditions of
Sethokga residents reconfiguring the mental and physical landscape of hostels in
contemporary South Africa and introducing children and women into the hostel
Integration was repeatedly cited by the key informants as the main imperative of the
study Political interference and the very particular sensitivities around political allegiance
Page | 88
(keeping in the mind the local elections are fast approaching) are factors that were
cited would cause the greatest difficulty in the allocation of the family units
54 Conclusion
Undoubtedly the Sethokga hostel conversion project has a number of components and
features to it that are complex in part ambiguous and would require further and more
detailed study Seemingly the CRU programme is a lsquodeparturersquo from the Hostel
Redevelopment Programme In part it offers prospects to facilitate the provision of
affordable rental tenure for those earning below R3500 while seeking to promote the
integration of publicsocial housing into the broader housing market Under the
administration of the CRU programme one of the leading aims is to facilitate the creation
of sustainable public housing assets (Pienaar 2010) However the CRU programme has
been criticised as a framework that is largely operating in a policy environment that is
hostile elaborate and not speaking to the needs of the people on the ground
Furthermore many see it as solely a hostel upgrading policy viewed often to be done
impromptu in response to local pressures (Pienaar 2010) To paraphrase Pienaar (2010)
the vagueness regarding the roles and responsibilities of the respective provincial
department of human settlement and municipalities has not provided much confidence
in hostel conversion projects
Chapter five has examined the Sethokga hostel conversion project and attempted to
unpack how the project has been conceptualised This chapter has identified and
outlined the main components of the project its main stakeholders and what has been
their role in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Discussed were the project phases a
number of critical elements such as how the project has understood the needs and
challenges of the hostel residents In addition to this chapter five outlined the way(s) in
which the residents have been involved in the project if the project considered anything
important in terms of gender issues and if what have these been factored into the
project By and large chapter five drew extensively on the findings of the fieldwork and
made an effort to narrate some of the insights and perspectives shared by the key
informants To conclude the chapter a collage of diagrams and images were presented
to offer the reader a visual narrative of the site of the family units
Page | 89
Concluding chapter
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoWhat does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
61 Review and reflections
This research report consisted of six chapters chapter one introduced the study
chapter two provided the theoretical backdrop of the study chapter three
introduced the study area (Sethokga hostel) chapter four discussed the evolution of
hostel redevelopment conversion and what has been the states approach to hostel
conversion and chapter five examined the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project
In chapter one the main point of discussion was the research question outlining the
aim and objectives of the study and the research methodology
Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project been conceptualised
in how the project has been conceptualised does it address the stigma of hostel life
and it what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What informed the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail what is the broad aim and vision
of the project what is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
Page | 90
In chapter one it was also argued that this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects had somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore that there needed to be more inquiry and
study conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel
conversion projects
The studyrsquos theoretical backdrop was discussed in chapter two The aim of this was to
contextualise the term hostels as to clearly illustrate what is meant by it In addition
to drawing on particular strands of literature concepts ideas and arguments that
resonated with the study Chapter two argued that the historically the landscape of
hostels has by and large been complex at times perplexing and highly contentious
Chapter three introduced Sethokga hostel It elaborated on the locality of the hostel
and its local as well as municipal context A visual narrative of the hostel was also
provided and this captured the current state of the hostel and the conditions in which
its residents endure It was established that ironically the conditions in the hostel are
not much different to many of the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg
The hostel was badly designed poorly built and is suffering years of neglect it is in
appalling and overcrowded condition
Chapter four described the evolution of hostel redevelopment conversion in the
country and what has been the states approach to hostel conversion post-1994 This
chapter discussed in some detail the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme Arguing that these programmes have to
date been the lsquoforerunnersrsquo of the statersquos approach to addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo
While in chapter five the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
was examined Chapter five was the crux of this research report The discussions in the
chapters before it set up the groundwork for a critical exploration of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project and for unpacking the research question
Chapter six concludes this study and seeks to answer the question ldquoso what does this
mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo Since this
report was conducted as part of the requirements for the partial fulfilment of an
Urban and Regional Planning honours qualification It is important to address the ldquoso
what for plannersrsquo question and the value that this report stands to offer to the
Page | 91
planning profession Firstly let us reflect on what have been some of the limitations of
the study
62 Limitations of the study
For the most part this study had a wealth of information and sources to draw from
The insights and wisdom provided by the key informants were invaluable their
willingness and enthusiasm to participate in this study was not something I had
anticipated but I remain truly grateful
Due to certain constraints more especially time constraints and the particular scope
focus of the research report this posed some limitations to the study In only
interviewing and engaging with officials and not with the residents of Sethokga the
voices opinions and views of the officials told only one side of a many-sided story
How the project affects and has affected the residents Is this something they want
support and for those who do not what are some of their reasons for contention Is
circular migration still as prominent a feature within the current context of Sethokga
What is the present-day nature of household configurations in the hostels (is the duty
of the older men still to order the actions of the younger men ie the cleaning and up
keeping of the communal area and other household duties) what for the residents
of Sethokga would constitute a successful project
Even as this study concludes the side of the hostel residents remains largely untold
and unreported Furthermore the supposed apathy on the part of the hostel residents
and the views expressed by the key informants that family units offer the most ideal
and best alternative to the residents of Sethokga could not be explored and
interrogated further given the limitations of the scope of the study
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners
Within contemporary South Africa there have certainly been a vast number of
conflicting views held regarding what should be the role and future of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Although academics policy makers bureaucrats developers and
the general public have usually been unable to reach longstanding middle-ground
on what should be done about hostels One of the more widely held views is that
hostels certainly present a real challenge but also an opportunity For government
Page | 92
developers non-government organisations (NGOs) built environment practitioners
and needless to say the residents of hostels themselves (Thurman 1997)
Planners are frequently cast in the role of performing a balancing act (Campbell
2006) As a result the adaptability of the planning profession as a coherent and
impartial discipline has over the years become rather topical subjects (Campbell
2006) This has inevitably continued to require new and innovative ways of lsquoseeingrsquo
lsquocomprehendingrsquo and lsquodoingrsquo things in order to shape and re-shape an inherently
divergent and historic-laden urban landscape (Jupp and Inch 2012) In the midst of
the shifts in the traditional conception and role of the planning profession as a merely
procedural and administrative activity (Harrison and Kahn 2002) planning is still to a
great extent closely tied to government structures (Cornwall 2002) Therefore within
this particular context of government driven intervention urban planning
professionals stand to be instrumental facilitators of development and offer essential
expertise and tools towards addressing some of the challenges within our urban
landscape (Albert and Kramsch 1999)
This study observed a range of intertwined urban dynamics ie around housing socio-
economic distress a wavering political climate and the need to be more
environmentally conscientious This necessitates focused attention and much
consideration as the political economic social and environmental junctures in which
planning has come to operate has meant that the profession has become
susceptible to external pressures scrutiny and influence (Campbell and Marshall
2002)
64 Conclusion
South Africa has for a number of years into democracy been at a critical time of
limited housing supply and a desperate need for housing (Khan and Thurman 2001)
(Pienaar
2010) Planners have an important role to play in facilitating coordinating and
effecting the reconfiguration of the urban landscape towards improving the setting
of inherently socio-economically ailing spaces such as hostels (Jupp and Inch 2012)
Hostels have largely remained as spaces that have continued to perpetuate
underdevelopment inequality and disempowerment (Khan and Thurman 2001) If
family units are to wholly address the stigma of hostel life and the convoluted nature
Page | 93
of hostels to alter the landscape of hostels and define a novel future for hostels and
their residents It is certain that this will require decisive action collaborative efforts
and the wisdom of retrospection
Page | 94
List of references
African National Congress 1994 The Reconstruction and Development Programme A
policy framework ANC Johannesburg
African National Congress (2003) Briefing note 5 Housing
httpwwwancorgzaelections2004briefingshousingpdf
Albert A and Kramsch O (1999) Space Inequality and Difference lsquoRadical Turns
and lsquoCultural Termsrdquo European Planning Studies 7(1) 77 ndash 79
Bandyopadhyay S and Green E (2008) Nation-building and Conflict in Modern
Africa The Suntory Centre
Barnett C (1999) Broadcasting the Rainbow Nation Media Democracy and Nation-
building in South Africa Editorial Board of Antipode 31 (3) 274-303
Benit-Gbaffou C and Mathoho M (2010) A case study of participation in the City
Deep Hostel Redevelopment Project Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Bonner P and Nieftagodien N (2012) Ekurhuleni the making of an urban region
Wits University Press
Campbell H and Marshall R (2002) Values and professional identities in planning
practice in Allmendinger R And Tewdwr-Jones M (eds) Planning futures new
directions for planning theory London Routledge
Castles S and M J (Millerl (2008) The Age of Migration International Population
Movements in the Modern World New York The Guilford Press
Charlton S et al (2014) From Housing to Human Settlement Evolving Perspectives
South African Cities Network
Chipkin I and Meny-Gibert S (2011) Why the Past matters Histories of the Public
Service in South Africa PARI Short Essays number 1 Johannesburg PARI
Collinson M A and K Adazu (2006) The INDEPTH Network A demographic resource
on migration and urbanisation in Africa and Asia Views on Migration in Sub-Saharan
Africa Proceedings of an African Migration Alliance Workshop C Cross D
Gelderblom N Roux and J Mafukidze Cape Town HSRC Press 159- 172
Page | 95
Collinson M A (2006) Health Impacts of Social Transition A study of Female
Temporary Migration and its impact on Child Mortality in Rural South Africa A
dissertation submitted to the School of Public Health University of the Witwatersrand
in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master in Science in the branch of
Medicine
Cornwall A (2002) Making Spaces Changing Places Situating Participation in
Development Institute of Development Studies IDS Working Paper 170
Creswell J W (2009) Research Design Qualitative Quantitative and Mixed Methods
Approaches 3rd Edition Los Angeles Sage Publications Inc
Demacon 2014 Sethokga hostels mixed typology market analysis market research
Findings and recommendations
Department of Human Settlements Republic of South Africa Programmes and
Subsidies document assessed on 7 July 2015 from
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentspublicationshuman_settlement
s_programmes_and_subsidiespdf
Department of Social Development Republic of South Africa White Paper on
Families in South Africa 2012
Dyiki M (2006) City of Cape Town Integrating Families Hostels to Homes
Redevelopment Programme Presentation
httpswwwwesterncapegovzatext200652006_hostels_presentation-_dyikipdf
Fritz V and Menocal A R (2007) Understanding State-Building from a Political
Economy Perspective An Analytical and Conceptual Paper on Processes
Embedded Tensions and Lessons for International Engagement Report for DFIDrsquos
Effective and Fragile States Teams Overseas Development Institute
Greenberg S and Mathoho M (2010) ldquoConceptual Framework on Public
Participation and Developmentrdquo Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Page | 96
Grieger L et al (2013) Moving Out and Moving In Evidence of Short-Term Household
Change in South Africa from the National Income Dynamics Study
Goldblatt B amp Meintjes S (1996) Gender and the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission a submission to the TRC May
Harrison P And Kahn M (2002) The ambiguities of change the case of the planning
profession in the province of KwaZulu-Natal South Africa in Thornley A and Rydin Y
(eds) Planning in the global era Aldershot Ashgate
Jupp E and Inch A (2012) Planning as a profession in uncertain times Town Planning
Review Vol 83 No 5
Khan F and Thurman S (2001) Setting the Stage Current Housing Policy and
Debate in South Africa Isandla Institute
Liefa Consulting (2015) Maps diagrams source
LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor
report
Mapetla M M (2005) Aspects of urban housing for women and men in Southern
Africa Roma Lesotho National University of Lesotho
Marshall M N (1996) Sampling for qualitative research Family Practice Oxford
University Press
Mosoetsa S (2011) Eating from one pot the dynamics of survival in poor South
African households Johannesburg Wits University Press
Mdunyelwa M L (2015) Public Participation in Hostel Redevelopment Programs in
Nyanga and Langa Dissertation presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in
the Faculty of Arts and Social Science at Stellenbosch University
National Housing Report (2009) -
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentsnational_housing_20092_Techn
ical_General_Guidelines
Netshitenzhe J (2011) A Developmental State South Africarsquos developmental
Capacity UCT Summer School Mapungubwe Institute for Strategic Reflection
Page | 97
Peoples Housing Programme httpwwwjoburg-
archivecozacity_visionannualreport2002-03chapter10pdf
Pienaar J S and Cloete C E (2005) Hostel Conversion as Social Housing in South
Africa Funding Regime VS Real Needs Case Study of the Sethokga Hostel Conversion
Project Pacific Rim Real Estate Society (PRRES)
Pienaar J (2010) Community Residential Units key elements application implications
for Metros Municipal Leadership Housing Forum0
Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the Community Residential Units
Programme 2006
httpwwwgovzaabout-governmentgovernment-programmescommunity-
residential-unit-cru-programme
Ramphele M (1993) A Bed Called Home Life in the Migrant Labour Hostels of Cape
Town Ohio Ohio University Press
Segal L (1991) The Human Face of Violence Hostel dwellers speak In The Journal of
Southern African Studies Vol 18 No 1
SJN Development Planning Consultants (2000) Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial
Development Framework
South African Department of Housing 2008 Community Residential Programme
httpwwwhousinggovzaContentCRUHomehtm
South African Local Government Association
httpwwwsalgaorgzaappwebrootassetsfilesGuidelines20for20Municipalities
Flyer20rental20housing20NMApdf
South African Yearbook 20122013
httpwwwsouthafricanewyorknetconsulateYearbook2020131320Human20S
ettlemp
Statistics South Africa Census (2001) Concepts and Definitions Report
httpswwwStatistics+South+Africa+Census+(2001)+Concepts+and+Definitions+Repo
rt+03-02-26+Version
Thurman S (1997) Umzamo improving hostel dwellersrsquo accommodation in South
Africa Environment and Urbanisation Vol 9 No 2
Page | 98
Urban Sector Network Final Report August 2000 ndash April 2003 Hostel Redevelopment
httppdfusaidgovpdf_docsPdaby792pdf
Van der Berg S (2010) Current poverty and income distribution in the context of
South African history Stellenbosch Economic Working Papers 2210
Von Holdt K (2010) Nationalism Bureaucracy and Developmental State The South
African Case South African Review of Sociology Volume 41 Number 1
Watt A (2012) Essentials of project management
httpopentextbccaprojectmanagement
Ziehl S C (2001) Documenting Changing Family Patterns in South Africa Are Census
Data of any Value African Sociological Review 5(2)
Interviews with key informants
Shibambo Vincent Resident Engineer LTE Consulting Interview 14thAugust 2015
(Sethokga family units project site)
Mthethwa Jabu Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Housing Officer Interview 17
August 2015 (Ekurhuleni Kempton Park Housing Offices)
Mohlapamaswi Ward Councillor ANC Tembisa Ward 4 Interview 18 August 2015
(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers
Sololo Lufefe Ward 4 Economic Development Representative Interview 18 August
2015(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers)
Majikijela Sisa Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlements Sethokga
Hostel Conversion Project Manager Interview 19 August 2015 (Sethokga family units
project site boardroom)
Dyiki Malibongwe Housing Development Agency Official 7 September 2015
(Housing Development Agency head office Killarney Johannesburg)
Bako Simba Liefa Architects Interview 9 September (LTE House Sunninghill
Johannesburg)
Page | 4
To everyone that contributed to this study I am truly grateful
To the two women closest and dearest to my heart my mom and grandmother you
have both been such a blessing and your zealous attitudes and support have been
invaluable le mohau wa modimo To my family my dad my aunt my brother Kwena
and cousins Koena Mohau le Phuti your support through this time kept me positive
and encouraged I love you all and thank you Thank you to all my friends more
especially to Ayanda for your love and support always
I would like to acknowledge the financial contributions of the Womenrsquos Property
Network (WPN) and the National Research Foundation (NRF) to Nicky Chetty from
WPN your optimism and gusto was always so refreshing Thank you
I am also grateful to the following people
My supervisor Dr Sarah Charlton the inputs that you gave and the contribution that
you made towards developing this study were truly invaluable and much
appreciated To Jabu Mthethwa Malibongwe Dyiki Simba Bako Cllr Mohlapamaswi
Sisa Majikijela Lufefe Sololo Vincent Shibambo Musa Ndaba and Mmagang
Modisha Thank you all for taking the time to share your thoughts and perspectives
Thank you to Nelson and Rosie for the hopefulness and wisdom you relentlessly
provided To Nqobile Malaza you model astuteness and diligence thank you for
being such a wonderful exemplar of potency and valour To Riaan Engelbercht I am
grateful for your editorial inputs
Page | 5
To think too long about doing a
thing often becomes its undoing ndash
Eva young
Page | 6
This study emanates as a result of two main contributing factors the first being
somewhat retrospective and the second being of academic interest and
inquisitiveness Both will hopefully contribute to a study that will make a meaningful
contribution to broader scholarly literature and learning
I grew up living fairly close to a hostel I had walked past this particular hostel
(Sethokga) on numerous occasions in fact more times than I can recall but I had
never set foot in a hostel until quite recently It was not because I was told not to go
into the hostel or cautioned not to mingle with those residing in the hostel but there
was always this strange feeling of unease and uncertainty that presented itself in the
lofty dim grungy facade of this place There was in myself however I curiousness
about the hostel not just because of how it looked that is the extensive and obvious
outward appearance of wear and tear but the ingenuous wondering of how this
place functioned Who lived there how did they live there and so I rather naively
wondered why anyone would chose to live lsquoin that placersquo What was also always
curious was how the hostel seemed to be remote from the township which
surrounded it
Some ten years later after many years that this hostel had been out of sight and for
the most part out of mind I was in the neighbourhood and noticed these more
appealing apartment-like structures that appeared to be replacing the old structures
and with a great deal of inquisitiveness and some courage I set to inquire on this The
abstract below confers some of my own sentiments that of the few published studies
on hostels most of the focus has been on hostels in Johannesburg and Cape Town
(Dyiki interview 2015) Hence the fact that the case study for this study was situated
in an area that is quite literally and somewhat figuratively lsquoclose to homersquo provided
personal eagerness and allure about this study and an opportunity to confront this
oversight
ldquo by an accident of research the hostels in Cape Town have been under a far
more intense sociological gaze than those on the East Rand Given the sudden
prominence of the inner city hostels in the Transvaal war we have been forced to
recognise and attempt to overcome this oversight of the few published studies
on the hostels in the Transvaal most focus on Johannesburg and are essentially
descriptiverdquo (Segal 19915)
Page | 7
While I have always been curious about where and how people live and their
experiences and reality in the places they reside hostels have always intrigued me
This particular focus on hostels also emanates as a result of a particular frustration
within my standing as a scholar with what has continually appeared to me that is to
be this sort of overstretched overemphasis and preoccupation by our post-1994
government with shanty towns This is not to say that I think shanty towns are not a
significant area of concern characterised by some of the worst living conditions and
rightfully so deserve concerted attention and decisive remedial measures According
to Segal (1991) much like hostel dwellers the residents of shantyrsquos form part of the
South African populace who have been amongst the most severely exploited and
disadvantaged (Segal 1991)
In focusing on hostels as a euphemism for single-sex labour compounds one is
confronted with a similarly momentous and multifaceted circumstance As hostels
were and largely still continue to be very much part of the housing crisis in the country
and so this research report will endeavour to cast some light on hostels to
contextualise hostels the hostel conversion approach and the associated stigma of
hostel live within a contemporary South African context
Page | 8
Chapter one Introductory chapter15
1 Introduction15
11 Background to the study17
12 Rationale18
13 Problem statement18
14 Research question and sub-questions19
15 Significance of the study19
16 Aim and objectives of the research20
17 Research methodology20
171 Type of research20
172 What kind of information is needed22
173 Collecting data22
174 Sampling22
175 Ethical considerations23
18 Conclusion24
Chapter two Theoretical backdrop25
2 Introduction25
21 Contextualising hostels26
22 Key concepts theories ideas and arguments27
221 The historic model of hostels the conceptualisation of the hostel system28
222 Migration and the notion of migrant labour labourers as conceived under the
hostel system29
223 The notion of bedhold31
Page | 9
224 The stigma of hostel life31
225 Family versus household configurations32
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing33
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy35
228The role and significance of communitypublic participation in hostel conversion
projects35
23 Conclusion38
Chapter three Introducing Sethokga hostel39
3 Introduction39
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)39
311 Geographic description of the study area41
312 Locality44
313 Local and municipal context45
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel50
321 Built formArchitecture50
322 Municipal services54
323 The adjoining area55
33 Conclusion56
Chapter four The states approach to hostel conversion58
4 Introduction58
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach58
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach59
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme59
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process60
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing61
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised
Housing61
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country62
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme63
44 The Community Residential Units Programme65
45 Conclusion67
Chapter five The Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project68
5 Introduction68
Page | 10
51 Outline of the main components of the project68
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project68
512 Project phases69
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project70
521 Broad vision and aim of the project74
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and
in turn set to address those needs and challenges76
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project77
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful78
53 Visual narrative of the site of the family units79
531Architectural designsplans79
532 The project site of the family units82
533 Inside the family units84
53 Summary of main themes and findings86
54 Conclusion88
Chapter six Concluding chapter89
61 Review and reflections89
62 Limitations of the study91
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners91
64 Conclusion92
List of references94
Page | 11
Pages
Maps
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni
hostel and Vusimuzi hostel40
Map 2 Locality map44
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex45
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework48
Figures
Figure 1 Ground floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 2 First floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 3 Elevation of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 4 Collage of exterior imagery of the hostel50
Figure 5 Collage of interior imagery of the hostel52
Figure 6 Municipal amenities54
Figure 7 The adjoining area55
Figure 8 Community meeting agenda74
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga developmenthelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip76
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development planhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip79
Figure 11 Architects Section F-Fhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figue 12 Architects Section E-Ehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figure 13 South Elevation80
Figure 14 North Elevatonhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip81
Figure 15 East Elevation81
Figure 16 West Elevation81
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site82
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units84
Table
Table 1 Total workforce in the period December 2013 - January 2014 Sethokga
sitehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip72
Page | 12
ANC African National Congress
Cllr Councillor
CRU Community Residential Units
DoHS Department of Human Settlements
EMM Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
GPDHS Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement
HRP Hostel Redevelopment Programme
IDP Integrated Development Plan
IFP Inkatha Freedom Party
MSDF Metropolitan Spatial Development Framework
PWV Pretoria ndash Witwatersrand ndash Vereeniging
RDP Reconstruction and Development Programme
SDF Spatial Development Framework
USAID United States Agency for International Development
USN Urban Sector Network
Page | 13
Chapter one will essentially introduce the research report The aim of this chapter is as
follows highlight the objective of the study provide a background to the study and
also discuss the rationale and problem statement In addition to detailing the
research question the significance of this study and the research methodology will
also be reviewed
Coincidently this research report is written and takes place at a time where there has
been somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms With the prevailing question being ldquoWhat iscontinues to be the
role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo Although this study will not in effect
actively seek to answer that particular question it presents a valuable premise for this
study ldquoFamily units to address the stigma of hostel liferdquo
The main aim of this chapter is to contextualise hostel to position the study within an
expanded theoretical framework The main chapter will in part argue that hostels
have largely remained as urban enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric and
that the rigid structures of regulation and control which were imposed on hostel
dwellers have perpetuated a complex state of affairs The literature review section
which details some of the key concepts theories ideas and arguments on the topic
will elaborate further on this
This chapter aims to provide a comprehensive description of the study area and so it
is in this chapter that the local as well as municipal context of the study area will
altogether be considered The aim of this chapter is to provide the reader with a sort
of lsquofeelrsquo of Sethokga hostel and its present-day circumstance It will attempt to
articulate to the reader the authors own experience and account of the study area
Page | 14
in an effort to provide the reader with a well-versed narrative of the multifaceted
nature of the hostel and the complex reality in which its residents endure
The South African statersquos approach to hostel redevelopment conversion is
discussed It is argued that the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of hostel
redevelopment conversion Chapter four discusses a number of state policy and
approaches addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo Ahead of this however the evolution of the
hostel redevelopment conversion approach is examined which dates back to the
earliest (soon after 1994) efforts by the South African government to remedy the ills of
the hostel system
Chapter five examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seeks to unpack
the conceptualisation of the project This chapter reflects and draws extensively on
the findings of the field work and the invaluable insights offered by the key informants
The main components of the hostel conversion project are examined and the vision
of Sethokga personified by the hostel conversion project is presented in chapter five
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoSo what does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
Page | 15
Introductory chapter
In the wake of the political transition in South Africa in 1994 and for some time
preceding this time frame violence squalor overcrowding and socio-political strife
had long become characteristic of some of the features associated with hostels and
the stigma of hostel life (Thurman 1997) Due to its history as systematically
disempowered yet politically vocal enclaves we have come to know or perhaps be
familiar with hostels as highly contentious and antagonistic environments with a
burdened local identity (Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The stigma of hostel life constitutes among a host of conditions an innate reality
where the residents of hostels inhibit isolated destitute and unbecoming spaces
(Segal 1991) Built as single-sex labour compounds to accommodate African migrant
labourers for the duration of their stay in South Africarsquos white urban areas hostels
occupy a unique position within the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape
(Thurman 1997) As sojourners in South Africarsquos white urban areas the law
constructed a lsquolegalrsquo person called a labourer who was lsquoauthorisedrsquo to temporarily
reside in the urban space but had to retreat to their rural quarters once their lsquoservicersquo
had been concluded (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Thus to draw attention to the
unkindness of their living conditions many hostel dwellers have continued for the
better part of South Africarsquos democracy to lsquochoosersquo physical violence as a tool
perceived to best serve and afford some attention to their troubles (Pienaar and
Crofton 2005)
Within the context of this research report the term hostels widely refer to single-sex
dormitory style labour compounds which emerged in South Africa under the
apartheid system and ideology of separate development (Pienaar and Crofton
2005) The ideology of separate development and the resultant influx control policies
were a distinctive trait of the government of a particular juncture in the countryrsquos
history - a government that as part of its mandate held to discourage the permanent
settlement of the African populace in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) This further
translated itself in the governmentrsquos refusal to plan and consent to any sort of
lsquomeaningfulrsquo investment into areas designated for the other who were primarily
located in the townships on the periphery of the urban terrain (Ramphele 1993)
Page | 16
Badly designed poorly built and suffering many years of neglect hostels were
primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for the comfort of hostel
dwellers (Thurman 1997) Conceivably the hostel system socialised its inhabitants into
an undignified and callous condition which has in some respect persisted and has
unfortunately not wholly been reconciled (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In hostels that
were male occupied hostel dwellers were regarded as lsquomen of four worldsrsquo which
referred to their present and existing life within the hostel the surrounding township(s)
places of work and their rural homes (Segal 1991) The hostel system made it
impossible for hostel dwellers to live in the hostel with their families ie wives
husbands partners children (Segal 1991) This consequence is particularly important
to note at this early stage in the report because of the wisdom and context it adds as
the study progresses
Coincidently this research is written and takes place at a time where there has been
somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms Undoubtedly the prevailing question has been ldquoWhat is should be
the role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo The current Minister of Human
Settlements has said that ldquohostels no longer have a place within South Africarsquos
democratically reconfigured state and so the state needs to get rid of hostelsrdquo (Sisulu
2015) However in a nation such as South Africa efforts towards transition are
ambiguous complex and can often be marked by violence (Mosoetsa 2011)
According to Thurman (1997) of an estimated 604 000 hostel beds around the country
in the late 1990s accommodated whole families relatively close to urban centres
Furthermore Thurman argues that hostels present both a significant challenge and an
opportunity for government NGOs developers and hostel dwellers themselves High
density housing stock stood to gain a considerably large supply of low income
(Thurman 1997) Even while a large number of hostel redevelopmentconversion
projects continue to be riddled with tension and difficulty the prospect(s) for change
and reform that they offer cannot simply be dismissed
This study seeks to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel conversion project to
develop an informed understanding of the defining features and characteristics of
this particular hostel conversion project It examines what is and what has been the
nature of engagement and dialogue between the various stakeholders involved and
discusses the insights they were able to offer to this study In 2015 21 years into South
Page | 17
Africarsquos democracy we have to wonder what is needed to make amends and offset
the dishonour of hostel life
11 Background to the study
We have to understand what the hostel system did was to lsquoaccommodatersquo the
African populace in single-sex labour compounds (Segal 1991) Upon their arrival
their presence in urban areas was constrained as they were met with strict rules and
restrictions (Ramphele 1993) In turn social relations were severally volatile and
ambiguous under the hostel system as hostel dwellers were constrained in their ability
to interact in certain or in their own chosen ways (Thurman 1997) There have been a
number of authors who have noted that the notion of family was partly if not entirely
redefined under this system (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were designed with little or no
thought given of human comfort security and interaction and many are still in
appalling neglected and overcrowded conditions (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) For
many people hostels represent a bitter and hopeless reminder of the past while for
others they are a well prized and affordable shelter in an environment of serve
homelessness (Thurman 1997)
Accordingly soon after 1994 South Africarsquos democratic government made some
attempt to convert hostels into environments suitable for family life although the
extent of this has not entirely been clear (DoHS 2015) This was met with hostility
violence and unwillingness by some hostel dwellers particularly those in the Pretoria
Witwatersrand and Vereeniging (PWV) region to have their hostels
convertedredeveloped into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010) The
violence that had become synonymous with hostel life became an overwhelming
impediment that proved difficult to overcome (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that the idea of an unambiguous constant and unrestricted
presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a point of contention for
some of the men who had far too long become accustomed to living lsquoalonersquo as
men Some expressed unwillingness while others found it a struggle to comprehend or
endorse this change that seemed far too unfamiliar and a challenge to come to
grips with (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Thus in hostels where hostel conversion projects have since taken-off the general
attitudes perceptions and reception of the projects have in some respects continued
to be negative and unwelcomed Scepticism tension and hostility add to the already
complex nature of the hostel conversion projects (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
Page | 18
2010) Hostels are still largely spaces confronted with deep social injustices (ie poor
living conditions a lack of privacy overcrowded) and are an insult to the dignity of
their occupants in several ways as both spatially limited and socio-economically
limiting spaces (Ramphele 1993) The limits imposed by hostels onto hostel dwellers
have persisted in protracting unkindness and a distorted conception of the
fundamental purpose of housing Hostels remain as an unfortunate symbol of a
former governmentrsquos refusal and failure to acknowledge the personhood (the
position and quality of being an individual or having feelings perspectives integrity
and human characteristics needs and wants) of the men and women they housed
(Ramphele 1993)
12 Rationale
Arguably hostel conversion projects and particularly the conceptualisation of these
projects is still a relatively under-researched field Based on my efforts to find
published work on the subject and even though there have been a number of
hostels across the country which have undergone or are undergoing hostel
conversion this remains a rather neglected study field
Hostels within their historic make-up were for the most part premised on fairly uniform
ideals arrangements and gender configurations The demographic setting within
some hostels across the country have since become a lot more fluid and departed
from their former mandatory construct (as strictly single-sex spaces) In what were
predominantly male occupied hostels women and children have since moved into
some of those hostels
Sethokga hostel which will serve as the case study for this research is a hostel that is
still predominantly male occupied but is undergoing hostel conversion to convert the
hostel into family units I believe that the fact that the hostel is still predominantly
male occupied presents an intriguing dimension to this study on hostel conversion
and efforts to grapple with the research question
13 Problem statement
In the case of Sethokga hostel a hostel conversion project is underway but it is not
clear what has sparked such a conversion and to what extent it is driven by the
available policies or assessments of needs or what attempt has been made to meet
these needs Subsequently what would the conversion of a predominantly male
Page | 19
dominated hostel rife with historically inherent conditions necessitate Therefore
how has the conversion project grasped the experience of men within such a hostel
and how has it grasped the concept of family life
14 Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units been conceptualised and
based upon the conceptualised ideas does it address the stigma of hostel life and it
what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What led to the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail What is the broad aim and vision
of the project What is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
15 The significance of the study - positioning the study relative to existing academic
literature
The significance of this research report lies in what I believe is a gap in the scope of
work covered over the years on hostels particularly on hostel conversion projects
Based on my efforts to find published work on the subject questions around what
these projects entail their implications relevance and impact remain unanswered
In the work I have managed to access so far this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects has somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore there needs to be more inquiry and study
conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel conversion
projects
As documented by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) there are vast and intricate
layers of engagement communication participation and even discontentment
Page | 20
involved in hostel conversion projects For instance the legitimacy around where
decision-making lies and which avenues are or should be available to voice
concerns have been some of the challenges relating to hostel conversion and have
added to the already complex nature of these projects
There is most certainly room for a study to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel
conversion project and probe this idea that family units could serve as an adequate
tool for the apt reform of hostels as many of us have come to know them associate
with them or even disassociate from them
16 Aim and objectives of the research
The main aim of this research report is to examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project and how the project has been conceptualised
Objectives
To examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
To develop a more comprehensive understanding of the hostel conversion
approach relative to the socio-economic and political context of the hostel
To explore the possibility and potential of family units as a viable tool to
addressing the stigma of hostel life
To examine how the project has understood the needs and challenges of the
residents and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
To examine the specific spatial focus of the project
17 Research methodology
171 Type of research
The methodology used in the study is a qualitative approach to research and semi-
structured interviews were conducted as the primary means of data collection
Additionally the data collection process involved the use of a variety of sources
which ranged from books journal articles newspaper articles and online media
platforms in the form of articles and radio podcasts
Page | 21
According to Cresswell (2009) this particular method to research (a qualitative
method) entails among other things the use of horizontal dialogue conversation and
the exchange of ideas between the interviewer and the interviewees (Cresswell
2009) Key informants were identified on the basis of their knowledge of andor
involvement in the Sethokga hostel conversion project and the following individuals
were interviewed
1st interviewee Mr Vincent Shibambo resident engineer with LTE consulting (the
company facilitating the construction and administration of the project) Interview
conducted 14th August 2015 at the project site The interview took place in the
boardroom of the project site offices
2nd interviewee Mr Jabu Mthethwa housing officer from the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality Interview conducted 17th August 2015 the interview took place in Mr
Mthethwarsquos office at the council offices in the Kempton Park CBD area
3rd interviewee ANC Ward 4 Tembisa Ward Councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi Interview
conducted 18th August 2015 in the ward councillorrsquos office at the ward councillors
chambers situated adjacent to the project site offices within the vicinity of the hostel
4th interviewee Mr Lufefe Sololo Ward 4 Tembisa Economic Development Rep (Mr
Sololo sits on the ward committee that advises the ward councillor) Interview
conducted 18th of August 2015 at Sethokga hostel
5th interviewee Mr Sisa Majikijela official from the Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlements Mr Majikijela is the current project manager of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project Interview conducted 19th of August 2015 in the boardroom
of the project site offices
6th interviewee Mr Malibongwe Dyiki who was a resident of a hostel in Cape Town in
the early 1980s He then became a community representative in later years and then
moved on to be a government official facilitating hostel redevelopments in the
Western Cape He has written and published on hostels and has also participated in
policy discussions on the Hostel Redevelopment Programme Interview was done on
the 7th of September 2015 at the Housing Development Agencyrsquos head office in
Killarney Johannesburg where he is currently working as the Programme Manager for
the mining towns programme
7th interviewee Simba Bako architect with Liefa Architects (appointed by LTE
consulting Liefa Architects were responsible for the design of the family units)
Page | 22
Interview conducted on the 9th of September 2015 at LTE House in Sunninghill
Johannesburg
172 What kind of information is needed
The kind of information that was needed was information which contextualised the
study area within its broader local and municipal context Pre-existing data
particularly demographic and statistical data on the hostel and its surroundings
Ekurhulenirsquos Integrated Development Plan the Metrorsquos Spatial Development
Framework and information that would give an overview of the geographic social
economic and possibly even the political context of the study area is needed
Moreover project reports studies memorandums or minutes and state policy on
hostel conversion would also be useful
173 Collecting data
In collecting data there were a number of methods and tools that were used which
involved moments of ad hoc discussion and deliberation around the topic What was
invigorating and always thrilling was peoplersquos interest and curiosity regarding this
study The impromptu encounter(s) with people who were open and ready to share
their point of views and experience(s) honestly made the data collection process
that much easier
There was a considerable amount of time spent on examining literature books
articles (both academic and media sources) sources on the internet and journals
Collecting data also involved examining similar programmes and projects on hostel
conversionredevelopment so collecting desktop data and consulting library sources
was an invaluable part of collecting data
174 Sampling
The study sample is important for any research The choice between qualitative
quantitative or even the consideration of using a mixed methods approach should
be determined by the research question and not decided subjectively In grappling
with the research question it seemed most appropriate for the purpose of this study to
make use of a qualitative approach It was believed that a qualitative approach
Page | 23
would provide the necessary framework to respond to the research question and
address the aim and objectives of the study In answering the lsquohowrsquo and lsquowhyrsquo
questions that the study would pose a qualitative approach would engage in a sort
of comprehensive exploration of the many-sided and possibly complex dynamics of
the Sethokga hostel conversion project For this reason a qualitative interview-
centred approach was used (Marshall 1996)
Marshall (1996) argues that there are three broad methods commonly used in
selecting a study sample that is convenience judgement and theoretical sampling
techniques Convenience sampling involves the most accessible person(s) it is the
least time consuming requires the least effort and financing Judgement sampling
also referred to as purposeful sampling is according to Marshall (1996) the most
widely used sampling technique With judgement sampling the researcher
purposefully and actively selects a sample that would best respond to their research
question and in principle convenience is set aside While theoretical sampling
involves a process of selection of a sample that is mainly driven by and rooted in a
theoretical position the sample is selected to examine or elaborate a particular
theory (Marshall 1996)
For the purpose of this study the judgemental sampling technique was used and this
entailed the active and purposeful selection of what Marshall refers to as lsquosubjectsrsquo
with particular expertise ie key informants The sample selection was based on my
prior experience and practical knowledge of the study area The limitation however
was that there were quite a number of elaborate and contentious issues at play
which within the limits of this study could not be explored at length on account of
time constraints and the particular focus of this study
175 Ethical considerations
As a young female scholar entering into a rather conflicted lsquotoughrsquo and culturally-
laden environment I was faced with what was an apparent concern for safety and
so on my trips to the hostel I was always accompanied by my father or a friend
Initially my intention was to interview some of the hostel residents but the sensitivities
around the harshness of their living conditions were highlighted as a possible area of
vulnerability and the spate of xenophobia attacks particularly in and around hostels
suggested reconsideration As a researcher I ensured that the participants were all
Page | 24
well aware and informed that their participation was voluntary and they were at
liberty to withdraw their involvement at any stage The interviewees were informed of
the choice to remain anonymous if they wished and that the information they shared
would be used to develop this research report Thus my ethical obligation as a
researcher was to ensure that I did minimal harm and unintentional damage through
my research that I conducted myself responsibly and professionally at all times and
that I reported accurately what I found including unforeseen and even negative
findings
18 Conclusion
Hostels consolidated the migrant labour system They served not only to control the
number of black labour residing in urban areas but also to manage its behaviour As
hostels were designed to be unattractive and uncomfortable many comparisons
have been made between hostels and institutions such as army barracks and prisons
There is a window of opportunity in promoting hostel conversion but injecting
resources into previously marginalised communities have resulted and is resulting in
conflict local power struggles and competition for those resources (Thurman 1997)
The next chapter will discuss the theoretical backdrop of this study and elaborate on
key concepts theories ideas and arguments that have been of particular relevance
to unpacking the research question
Page | 25
Theoretical backdrop
2 Introduction
It is imperative at this point to contextualise the term hostels so as to clearly il lustrate
what is meant by it This section of the report will contextualise the term hostels and it
will examine key concepts theories ideas and arguments that are of particular
relevance to the study
Furthermore chapter two argues that hostels have largely remained as urban
enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
It argues that the rigid structures of regulation and control that were imposed upon
the former inhabitants of hostels were essentially just one part of a multi-faceted and
disconcerting circumstance that has continued to live on within a large number of
hostels (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012) This view that hostels operated and in some
respect continue to operate under a complex set of circumstances is shared and
supported by the work of authors such as Segal (1991) Ramphele (1993) Goldblatt
and Meintjes(1996) Thurman (1997) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) Dyiki (2006) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) Subsequently some of their work will be used to
unpack the research question and draw on certain aspects that resonate with the
case study The following abridged abstract describes some of the complexities
around hostels and the views captured in the work of some of the authors mentioned
above
According to Segal (1991) hostel life and the regulations imposed upon hostel
dwellers made it extremely difficult to maintain family life that is men would leave
their families in the rural areas for long periods of time to find work in the city
Ramphele (1993) notes that the families of the men would then became reliant for
their survival upon the remittance of the men Mapetla (2005) makes a compelling
argument that suggests that within contemporary society men are traditionally
culturally and even spiritually still regarded as the head the protector and provider of
their families even as the lines delineating the roles of men and women within
contemporary society have become faint and more fluid Arguably hostels still exist
within a highly complex setting (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Page | 26
21 Contextualising hostels
Generally hostels were badly designed poorly built and many have been suffering
years of neglect (Thurman 1997) Hostels were primarily built to accommodate
African migrant workers for the containment of their labour over the duration of their
stay in what were demarcated as South Africarsquos white urban areas (Thurman 1997)
There are notably three types of hostels namely public sector private sector and
grey sector hostels (Ramphele 1993)
Public sector hostels are hostels that were built and managed by provincial or local
authorities and mainly accommodated workers across a range of sectors (Ramphele
1993) Private sector hostels were built by private sector enterprise to house private
sector labourers who would mainly be working in the factories and mines (Pienaar
and Crofton 2005) Grey sector hostels were built on public sector-owned land by the
private sector under some form of contractual agreement with a government
authority (provincial or local) but were largely managed and controlled by private
sector employers (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Public and grey sector hostels were
generally situated in the townships (Thurman 1997) However when they were
planned these hostels were generally located on the outskirts of the cities but with
increased urban growth they now relatively tend to be more centrally situated
(Thurman 1997)
Ramphele (1993) argued that each hostel had a distinct form and quality about it
Elements of tribalism certain customs systems of belief and association dimensions of
conflict and conflict resolution were not homogeneous across all hostels (Ramphele
1993) The type of work that the migrant labourers did across the sectors they worked
was often rudimentary It ranged from unskilled to very basic semi-skilled work and it
was quite labour intensive in return for meagre earnings (Ramphele 1993)
Historically hostels were characterised by two main geographic classifications firstly
hostels in the backdrop of an urban context (ie also referring to inner city hostels)
and secondly hostels in the areas around mines (Segal 1991) According to Segal
(1991) urban context hostels had a more diffused grouping of hostel dwellers than
their mining counterparts (Segal 1991) Hostels in urban context developed broader
and somewhat complex relations with the outside community This contrasted with
the extreme isolation of hostel dwellers in hostels around the mines Therefore hostels
in the urban context were to a lesser extent conceived to be lsquomore openrsquo and lsquoless
strictly controlledrsquo However both were essentially sites of control and exploitation
Page | 27
with clearly marked physical boundaries in form of high walls and fences with single
and restricted entry and exit points (Segal 1991)
Hostels in urban areas had government bureaucracies responsible for their
management and maintenance as opposed to a single employercompany (Segal
1991) Moreover hostels in the urban context accommodated a wider and more
diverse range of workers who did not necessarily work for the same
employercompany or have uniform working hours or shifts In urban hostels ethnicity
was not the official organiser of hostel dwellers as men from different backgrounds
and homelands would and could share rooms (Ramphele 1993) Lastly and perhaps
the most important distinguishing feature of the two was the fact that hostels in urban
areas were not under the extensive force of lsquototal controlrsquo as was the experience of
mining hostel dwellers (Segal 1991 Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
According to Pienaar and Crofton (2005) public sector hostels accommodated the
largest number of hostel dwellers Overall the quality of living environment of hostels
was generally poor but this was particularly bad in public sector hostels (Ramphele
1993) Additionally the administrative processes and management of public sector
hostels was under dire strain as no clear records of those that lived in the hostels or
those entering and exiting the hostel were kept (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that although private sector hostels were considered to be
better managed and maintained The general state of all hostels whether public or
privately owned was largely characterised by poor living conditions a lack of
privacy the sharing of very limited spaces a distressed local context and
overcrowded conditions (Ramphele 1993) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) further note
that around the early 1980s hostel residents simply started to withdraw from payment
of rentals and thus the maintenance of the hostels grew even thinner and steadily
non-existent Public sector hostels grew especially financially and politically
unmanageable (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
22 Key concepts theories ideas and arguments
To unpack the research question and contextualise the study within a broader
theoretical framework this section of the report will discuss and draw on a number of
concepts theories ideas and arguments
Page | 28
221 The historic model of hostels the conceptualisation of the hostel system
In grappling with the historic model of the hostel system this section of the report will
discuss two main themes The conceptualisation of the hostel system and migration
migrant labour as conceived under the hostel system It illustrates the effect hostels
have had on shaping the lives and experiences of their inhabitants in unique and
complex ways (Thurman 1997)
South Africa is a country marked by a legacy of systematic discrimination and the
deliberate disempowerment of a lsquocategoryrsquo of its population (Thurman 1997) Hostels
were established supported and perpetuated by methodical policy frameworks and
brute controls to discourage the permanent settlement of the in historically lsquowhite
areasrsquo (Segal 1991) Thurman (1997) argues that hostels occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are symbolic of three centuries of
systematic racial discrimination
Seemingly ignited by and originating in the mining industry in the nineteenth century
the construction of hostels reached a peak during the 1960s and 1970s in the period
that has been referred to as the ldquogrand apartheidrdquo years (Thurman 1997) They were
built as single-sex dormitory compounds to accommodate African migrant labourers
as sojourners in what were delineated as white urban areas (Ramphele 1993) In
hostels which were intended strictly for male migrant labourersrsquo job-seeking by
African women was criminalised and a deliberate policy not to provide family
housing was pursued (Ramphele 1993)
Common to hostels was the blurring and hostility of the boundaries between the
hostel dwellers place(s) of work and their living spaces (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) In
turn some authors have argued that hostels in some sense functioned as a lsquototal
institutionrsquo According to Segal (1991) and Ramphele (1993) geographically many
hostels were isolated and situated literally at the edges of urban areas and society in
general They were primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for
human comfort safety or enrichment (Thurman 1997) The heavy-handedness of the
hostel system imposed a cunning inferiority complex a sense of no escape yet quite
interestingly a later unwillingness and indifference to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have
their hostel converted into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Ramphele (1993) and Segal (1991) make a rather compelling argument and share
the view that the behaviour and conduct of some of the hostel dwellers against
Page | 29
having their hostel converted into family units is indicative of similar behaviour and
actions displayed by long-term prisoners and people contained in barracks They
argue that a substantial number of long-term inmates would in some instances
display great unwillingness and some difficulty to the prospect of re-entering society
after being socialised into a total institution a reformatory (Ramphele 1993 and
Segal 1991) According to a text by Statistics South Africa (2001) an institution can be
defined as a communal place of residence for persons with common characteristics
(Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001) One could then argue
that one of the common characteristics shared by many hostels was the migrant
labourer status attributed to them (Dyiki 2006)
222 Migration and the notion of migrant labour labourers as conceived under the hostel
system
Castles and Miller (2008) argues that all through time and space individuals and
families have been migrating and doing so for a number of reasons Universally the
migration lsquophenomenonrsquo was and has been as a result of varying factors and in
response to certain causes and events such as demographic growth environmental
changes development vs underdevelopment and the seeking of lsquobetterrsquo
opportunities (Castles and Miller 2008) Others have turned to migration to seek jobs
often located or perceived to be concentrated in larger urban centres (Collinson
and Adazu 2006 Castles and Miller 2008)
Migration can occur as a voluntary or forced process This study is particularly
interested in the event of migration that becomes forced migration when the
circumstances of individuals and families leave them little or no choice but to pursue
lsquohopersquo away from their native home-base (Castles and Miller 2008) Arguably this was
characteristic of the hostel model Hostels enabled mines and later other industries to
suppose and cause that hostel dwellers had homes in rural areas (Collinson 2006)
Seemingly the rural populace was the lsquodesiredrsquo workforce ushered into the city and
mines and exploited as labourers for the development of the urban-based economy
(Thurman 1997)
According to Thurman (1997) the residents of hostels were typically considered as
rural traditionalists and lsquodangerousrsquo outsiders by the residents of townships which
surrounded the hostel Their physical as well as social isolation meant that they often
retained strong links with their rural home-base (Segal 1991) This involved the
Page | 30
periodic movement of individual household members between the hostel and their
rural homes (Thurman 1997) The ruralurban linkages which were subsequently
fashioned became a distinguishing feature of not just hostel dwellers but the black
African populace and as a part of their experience of urban life (Collinson and
Adazu 2006) The costly urban world was thus considered by many as merely a place
of work (Segal 1991 and Ramphele 1993)
This type of migration - also often referred to as lsquocircularrsquo or lsquooscillatingrsquo migration -
became characteristic of a sort of temporary sentiment to life and living in the city
(Dyiki 2006) Additionally the events of circular migration presented certain
household dynamics and challenges in maintaining the often faint links between the
migrant and the households family left behind (Collionson 2006 Ramphele 1993)
Conceivably hostel dwellers have for a long time had a common rural orientation
(Segal 1991) ldquoIt has been repeatedly demonstrated that migrants do not leave
behind the countryside in their journey to the cityrdquo and this rural consciousness has
remained central to the migrant labour population (Segal 1991 9)
Within contemporary society the concept of lsquothe new economies of labour
migrationrsquo has emerged as an alternative position and argues that migration can be
and has become a household strategy (Collinson and Adazu 2006) According to
Collinson and Adazu (2006) within their analysis of contemporary migration patterns
migration has now largely become something that is purposefully chosen by
members of a household family This phenomenon involves the temporary migration
of some individuals within the household family in pursuit of opportunities towards
the collective betterment of the family household or even their broader community
(Collinson and Adazu 2006) Under this model of migration family and community
networks are considered to play an important and supporting role in facilitating
migration between urban-based and village-based households families (Collinson
and Adazu 2006) What is then required of the migrant is thatheshe reciprocate the
initial support offered by hisher household family community as received in hisher
rural-base (Collinson and Adazu 2006)
While in some respect migration is becoming a lsquolonged-forrsquo process and somewhat of
a deliberate choice on the other hand adverse circumstances force families
households to partake in this process as a means of survival (Collinson and Adazu
2006) The ability of migrants to maintain both an urban and rural residence in
whatever context ie historic or contemporary continues to present a social
geographic and economically complex state of affairs (Pienaar and Crofton (2005)
Page | 31
223 The notion of bedhold
The context of hostels designed to be uncomfortable and uninviting the closest
likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo was in the form of a bed Every aspect of life and
survival in hostels revolved around a bed (Ramphele 1993) According to Ramphele
(1993) this in turn perpetuated a circumstance of lsquoclientelismrsquo and blurred the lines of
patronage when it came to the exchanging of the membership of beds and when
beds were to be allocated or reallocated (Ramphele 1993) The ill-defined and fluid
relationship of patronage between bed-holders would in some respect function like
and resemble households (Ramphele 1993 Segal 1991 Mosoetsa 2011)
In some sense bed-holders assumed an intermediary role and served an informal
function as lsquolandlordsrsquo thus as proprietors of the bedhold (Ramphele 1993) Hostel
dwellers became lsquobed-holdersrsquo rather than lsquohouse-holdersrsquo in the urban space
(Segal 1991) It became unduly problematic that the bed was the only space over
which they could have any measure of control It after all distorted the perceptions
hostel dwellers developed of themselves in relation to their environment constraining
them to varying degrees (Ramphele 1993) Ramphele (1993) argues that the limits set
by physical space in hostels also defined in very clear terms the inside versus the
outside security versus insecurity family versus non-family and urban versus rural She
further argues that onersquos very identify in the hostel and their lsquolegal existencersquo in the
urban space depended on their attachment to a bed (Ramphele 1993) According
to Ramphele (1993) the bed acted as a sort of mediator thus lsquoa go-betweenrsquo the
hostel dwellers and the rest of society to which they remain somewhat disconnected
and possibly indifferent (Ramphele 1993)
224 The stigma of hostel life
The stigma of hostel life gave a rather conspicuous meaning to lsquoblack urban lifersquo and
their experience(s) of life in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were badly
designed poorly built and many suffer years of neglect (Thurman 1997) There have
been a number of authors who have argued that hostel dwellers suffered a great
injustice to their humanity their perception of self constrained relations with others
and a constant struggle to maintain family networks with their often rural-base
(Goldblatt and Mentjies 1996)
Page | 32
The living conditions in hostels have been expressed in basic terms as shocking
disgusting inhumane cruel and intolerable by both scholars and residents of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Hostel accommodation is undesirable both aesthetically and
conceptually and there are a number of common features which characterise most
hostels a lack of privacy overcrowded and poor living conditions very limited space
and a serious state of disrepair (Ramphele 1993) Failing to delineate private
personal space the purpose of hostels was to ensure a compliant labour force (Segal
1991)
According to Ramphele (1993) hostels represent physical space that is not only
limited but is also limiting Ramphele makes a distinction between the circumstance
and living arrangements of hostel dwellers and township residents Arguing that
although physical overcrowding of sleeping accommodation between the two
(hostel dwellers and township residents) many not be much different in terms of the
ratio of people to roomsbeds (Ramphele 1993) For township residents it is most likely
that they would be sharing these limited facilities with kin or friends rather than
complete strangers (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of hostels some men
women may adapt too well to living in single-sex hostels and would find change too
difficult to cope with (Ramphele 1993)
225 Family versus household configurations
The terms family and household are not necessarily synonymous According to the
Department of Social Development (2012) ldquoa household comprises of either (i) a
single person who makes provision(s) for hisher food or other essentials for living or (ii)
a group of at least two or more people living together who make common provision
for their food and other essentialsrdquo (White Paper on Families in South Africa 2012 11)
Moreover the Department notes that a household can contain a family yet the
members of the household are not always necessarily a family further remarking that
ldquoa household performs the functions of providing a place of dwelling and the sharing
of resources and these functions can be performed among people who are related
by blood or people without any such relationshiprdquo (White Paper on Families in South
Africa 2012 11) This distinction of family and household configurations is useful to this
study for two main reasons (a) as it has been suggested that one of the broad aims of
the hostel conversion approach is to introduce facilitate lsquofamily lifersquo and to inject a
family quality into these historically single-sex environments (b) Is it then supposed by
the Sethokga hostel conversion project that the household configurations in the
hostel are at present existing wholly in the absence of family configurations
Page | 33
It is important to be mindful of the fact that with time households have become
more complex and family structures more diffused (Mosoetsa 2011) Hostel dwellers
through years of living under space constraints and in single-sex accommodation
have developed certain ideologies practices and habits (Thurman 1997) Arguably
the hostel system redefined and reshaped family and household configurations and
constructed a complex social setting (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of male
occupied hostels relationships among men are characterised by hierarchy and
Ramphele (1993) notes that this is legitimised by lsquotraditionrsquo and is based on age
differences The older men are more likely to occupy positions of authority and be
regarded as the lsquoheadsrsquo of the household and in authority to organise the affairs of
the household Whereas the younger men would be cast in the role of attending to
duties considered lsquotypicalrsquo to women and that is the upkeep of the household ie
cleaning cooking In this lsquomanrsquos worldrsquo tradition and age regulate the day-to-day
function of the household (Ramphele 1993) The links between the men and the
families they had have left behind has arguably become increasingly scant and
incoherent (Grieger et al 2013) With the blurring of their lsquobindingrsquo reciprocal
obligations and support the conception of family life was redefined and put under
considerable strain as a result of migrant labour laws and the criminalisation of job-
seeking activity in urban areas of their rural wives partners (Segal 1991)
In both family and household configurations shared obligations and mutual support
takes many forms (Mapetla 2005) The family structure is perceived to be the
lsquocommander and regulator of the activities and conduct of the individual members
The family structure has been set apart from a household in that a household is more
of a residential unit where related andor none-related individuals in a sense lsquoeat
from the same potrsquo (Mosoetsa 2011) In some cases the individuals and members of
a household provide themselves jointly with food andor other essentials however a
household can also consist of a person who lives alone The distinguishing feature is
that a family configuration consists of people individuals who have a blood-kin
connection and this can include immediate and extended relatives but the same
does not necessarily always hold true for household configurations (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005 Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001)
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing
South Africa can still somewhat be regarded as a traditionally patrilineal society
where land and property are traced through the male lineage where upon marriage
Page | 34
a woman is required to leave her native home to reside with her husband at his home
(Mapetla 2005) This system has been more inclined to empower men (Ziehl 2001)
Subsequently within contemporary society and within the lsquonew politics of gender
relationsrsquo property and land ownership have since become a highly contentious
subject Therefore the issue of housing is quite a significant one and warrants some
reflection particularly the aspect of men and housing (Mapetla 2005)
Gender roles have steadily been changing and are increasingly becoming ill-defined
(Ziehl 2001) So how can or rather how should housing projects and interventions
such as hostel conversion projects be more gender sensitive inclusive representative
and reflective of the changing gender roles both in a social and spatial sense
Gender considerations regarding housing and housing projects need to be mindful of
the innate differentiation between men and women and their not always uniform
needs and interaction(s) with space (Mapetla 2005) The often male bias when it
comes to access to housing might just further be perpetuated through hostel
conversion projects The question here is then does this new conception of a
reconfigured living environment in the form of family units make provision(s) towards
addressing any of the housing-related gender biases What do these projects
consider important in terms of gender issues if at all how have these issues been
factored into the projects
Gender and housing related theory has often argued strongest the case of women in
their inability to access housing land the law and related funding (Ziehl 2001) The
issues of gender relations and access to housing have become increasingly topical
(Mosoetsa 2011) Womenrsquos rights access to the law resources and social amenities
have been areas which have gained a significant amount of traction in both policy
and academic circles owing to historically discriminatory laws (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005) However in South Africa and perhaps this is true for many other
societies traditionally culturally and even spiritually men are still to a significant extent
regarded as the head of household the foremost provider for their families (Mapetla
2005)
Within the context of hostels migrant labour laws which also made it a point that the
remuneration of its African labour workforce was as horrendous as the conditions they
lived in shaped a particular aspect of menrsquos relation to housing in the urban context
and their experiences (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In a study conducted by Segal
(1991) a group of men living in a hostel were interviewed to give their account of life
in the hostel According to Segal (1991) it became apparent that the men tolerated
the hostel because they felt humiliated by even the thought of losing their roles as the
Page | 35
provider for their family Some men suggested that they could and would not bring
their wives or children to the hostel for even a brief visit (Segal 1991) In their minds
they were better off alone in the citymine because the burden of their own survival
was already enormous (Segal 1991)
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy
Large sections of the South African state have continued to be institutionally
ineffective unsustainable and dysfunctional (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert 2011) Post-
1994 efforts towards nation-building and state formation in the country have taken
many forms a unitary state the inauguration of a new president of the Republic of
South Africa and the promulgation of the 1996 Constitution of the Republic(Barnet
1999) Furthermore the ideals of nation building and state formation would attempt
to diffuse into a sound and convergent form what was once opposite and adverse
(von Holdt 2010)
The housing deficit in the country was and has continued to be one of the greatest
challenges facing the government particularly the inadequate provision and access
to housing for the black majority who had been rendered destitute and occupying
dreadful accommodation (Thurman 1997) In what could better be regarded as
temporary disaster relief areas than housing suitable for any human to call lsquohomersquo
(Ramphele 1993) Post-apartheid bureaucratic inefficiency class formation
redundant budgetary rituals antagonistic attitudes towards public service vocation
and authority has greatly stifled service delivery imperatives ie social housing
provision (von Holdt 2010) Undoubtedly the role of policy towards addressing issues
such as housing and service delivery is a significant one (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert
2011) this will be discussed further in chapter four
228 The role and significance of community public participation in hostel conversion to
family unitrsquos projects
Public participation in any context is a complex and at times a contentious exercise
Academic literature on community public participation tends to presuppose an
experience or existence of informal unambiguous or authentic relations in
community participation processes (Mdunyelwa 2015) This particularly in housing
related projects and programmes with the assumption that if all the stakeholders
involved are consulted the process of participation is likely to yield positive results and
success (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) In South Africa the notion of public
Page | 36
community participation has gained popularity as a democratic practice essential
for development and nation-building (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their research project entitled ldquoA
Case Study of participation in the City Deep Hostel Redevelopmentrdquo suggests that
there are more complex and less diffused forces at play According to Benit-Gbaffou
and Mathoho (2010) the central question often becomes when and at what point
can one say people have effectively or meaningfully participated This question is
especially relevant and significance to hostel conversion projects and to efforts to re-
configure hostels as lsquofamily units suitable for family lifersquo (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010) According to state policy the hostel conversion redevelopment approach is
and has been a nation-wide intervention initiated by the post-1994 government to
redevelop convert hostels in efforts to de-stigmatise these historically-laden spaces
(Dyiki 2006) Moreover the current Minister of Human Settlement has of late stated
on a number of media platforms the hostel conversion approach also seeks to
rehabilitate these historically single-sex migrant labour compounds into family
apartmentsunits to promote a family-oriented setting (Sisulu 2015) According to a
2001 text by Statistics South Africa ldquoconverted or upgraded hostels should be treated
in the same way as a block of flats and each unit considered as a separate housing
unitrdquo (Statistics South Africa Census2001 3)
The importance and usefulness of public community participation in hostel
conversion projects have been a widely and overly debated topic However this
does not wholly take away from the fact that there are many and varied obstacles
and challenges when it comes to the actual practice and experience of
participation on the ground (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) Even while the political
and socio-economic contexts of every project are varied with different structures and
the coordination of stakeholders take on different forms (Mdunyelwa 2015) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) argue that participation has often become a political
process riddled in processes of negotiation and rampant differences of opinion
coupled with a mix of personal andor political ambitions (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010)
Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their study of the City Deep Hostel
Redevelopment Project outlined a number of issues which the project encountered
before during and after the hotel redevelopment project there included
Page | 37
Before the redevelopment process
Managing change while also trying to mitigate violence the unauthorised
occupation of tenants wanting to gain the benefits of the redevelopment project
and the allocation of units (as a contentious challenge) were cited as challenges
encountered before the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
During the process
Challenges around the design of the units (limitations and constraints with respect to
skills time and finances) the issue of labour the provision of public and social
facilities services (ie cregraveches play areas for the children) were cited as being
encountered during the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
Issues after the project
Tariff rates (with electricity as one of the biggest concerns) along with the
disagreement and discontentment around rental payments were cited as the
challenges which were encountered post the hostel redevelopment process A
central question and concern that arose focused on whether the hostel did not just
became a renovated workersrsquo hostel or if it actually did change into actual family
units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
With the study area for this research in mind I am left wondering if the issues identified
by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) are unique to the City Deep contextproject
or are they to some extent representative and reverberate to the broader
challenges and limitations of hostel conversion projects across the country Certainly
there is some value to participation when it comes to hostel conversion
redevelopment but the process of participation particularly within the context of
hostels as politically and socio-economically volatile environments will most likely be
confronted by sturdy issues of inherent sensitivities and nuances (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010) This is what Mdunyelwa (2015) decisively refers to as binary cultural
political and social structures alluding to the sentiment that some hostel dwellers are
in some respect men and women of two minds set free from the physical shackles of
oppression yet still sadly unable and ill-equipped to live and transform their thinking
well beyond that (Mdunyelwa 2015)
Page | 38
23 Conclusion
Typically the body of work that exists on hostels is unambiguously and largely
concentrated on the historically-laden context of hostels It especially articulates
issues of violent conflict and tension within hostels and their surrounding areas
Conflict situations are often captioned as hostel versus township lsquowarsrsquo There is an
important political backdrop to this which relates to the rural urban links made
mention of in this chapter
Furthermore the poor living conditions of hostels the inadequate provision of services
and social amenities should be considered The loss of family life and the sense that
hostels pose as limited spaces which is a negative reflection on to dignity of its
inhabitants are some of elements associated with the stigma of hostel life (Bonner
and Nieftagodien 2012 Ramphele 1993) This has to quite a significant extent
remained a present-day and associated reality of the hostel setting and has posed
vast challenges to hostel conversion redevelopment projects
This chapter has argued that the landscape of hostels has by and large remained
complex at times perplexing and highly contentious As a resultant the wicked
consequences of the hostel system have been many and varied but all of which
warrant due attention The theoretical backdrop on hostels has been useful in
developing themes that resonate with the case study Sethokga hostel Of particular
relevance to the case study will be role and significance of community public
participation in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Highlighting some of the
issues encountered before and during the project as the project has not yet been
completed Certain aspects of the discussion on key concepts theories arguments
and ideas and how they resonate with the case study will be explored further
Particularly the notion of bedhold the aspect of men and housing the stigma of
hostel life and the resultant consequences of the hostel system will be critically
discussed in chapter five which examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project
Page | 39
Introducing Sethokga hostel
3 Introduction
In addition to the study area this chapter will in greater detail describe and locate
Sethokga hostel It examines its local as well as municipal context and presents a
visual narrative of the hostel The aim of the visual narrative is to provide the reader
with a lsquosensersquo of the physical setting of the hostel thus to provide the reader with a
visual depiction of the multifaceted circumstance of the hostel and the complex
challenges in which its residents endure Chapter three largely seeks to provide the
reader with an impression of the context in which the Sethokga hostel conversion
project is taking place
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)
In the period between 1890 and the late 1920s Ekurhuleni (at the time referred to as
the East Rand region of the Transvaal Province) experienced increased numbers of
black male workersmigrants This was as a result of a surge in the gold mining sector
which took place on the Witwatersrand gold reefs (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
According to Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) of the 15 000 workers that were
employed in the sector some 5 000 worked in what is now called the Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality With time the number of workers in the Ekurhuleni area
continued to rise considerably most of who were oscillating migrants who were either
accommodated in labour compounds such as hostels or shanty settlements in
townships across Ekurhuleni such as Tembisa Duduza Tsakane Kwa-Thema and so
forth (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) also argue that for most of the period of the
booming mining sector in the Witwatersrand reef to well into the countryrsquos
democratic dispensation political contention in hostels had long been a common
feature throughout the region As a consequence hostels and a number of the
townships in Ekurhuleni have somewhat continued to exist within a circumstance of
deep-seated antagonistic political and socio-economic conditions (Bonner and
Nieftagodien 2012)
Sethokga hostel is one of the largest hostels in the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan region
according to the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis Study in 2014 there
Page | 40
were approximately 12 120 residents living in the hostel (Demacon 2014) Of that
roughly 4 000 have since the beginning of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
been relocated or reallocated within other blocks in the hostel to make way for the
construction of the family units (Demacon 2014) Some of the relocations of residents
have been to alternative sites outside the hostel to either Enhlanzeni hostel or
Vusimuzi hostel both situated in the Tembisa area (Demacon 2014)Interestingly
Enhlanzeni as well as Vusimizi hostels are also experiencing issues of overcrowding
poor living conditions and similar socio-economic conditions to Sethokga Moreover
neither Enhlanzeni nor Vusimuzi hostel have or are undergoing upgrading
conversion It was not clear in the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis
Study what the reasons for relocating the residents of Sethokga to these hostels were
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni hostel and
Vusimuzi hostel
Source Demacon 2014
Page | 41
311 Geographic description of the study
Sethokga hostel was built in 1980 and much like other hostels across the country the
Sethokga hostel was badly designed poorly built and has been suffering years of
neglect Sethokga hostel is a public sector type hostel and is owned by the
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Sethokga was built to accommodate male
migrant labourers from a range of industries (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Similar to
numerous other hostels men could live in the hostel so long as they had work in
industries but wives partners and families were prohibited from residence (Thurman
1997) They were entitled only to short-term visiting permits Regular and violent raids
which were carried out by authorities during the day and at night would rigorously
enforce these regulations to chase away arrest or bus back the wives partners and
families of the men back to the homelands (Thurman 1997)
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi initially the hostel
accommodated a lsquomixturersquo of residents black men across all tribes and ethnicities
but he recalls the change that occurred in the 1990s in response to political shifts He
recalls that ldquoafter the release of Mandela and when they started preaching lsquothis
thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions happened according to who was Zulu or
Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Below the ward
councillor explains what he saw as some of the factors that led to what is currently
the strong predominance of Pedi and Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel
suggesting that ldquoThere were mixed feeling when talks were rife concerning
negotiations that could lead to possible elections because the IFP (Inkatha Freedom
Party) was rejecting such a notion At the time it was a situation of the Zulursquos terrorizing
the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa and standing with the white man The
Zulursquos did not like such an idea which caused a divide among the Zulu and Xhosa
This led to conflict between the Xhosa and the Zulu There was fighting everywhere in
the country and you found some Pedis Venda and Tsongarsquos ran away from certain
hostels because they were being chased out and some landed up in Sethokga (
Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) The points made by Cllr Mohlapamaswi flag some
interesting points for instance that this hostel in some respect played the role of a
place of refuge and might affect how residents view it
Sethokga hostel is situated on approximately 22 hectares of land and consists of 29 U-
shaped single and two storey dormitories but mainly consists of the two storey walk-up
dormitories (Demacon 2014) The hostel lies on medium dolomitic soil despite this it
has been said and reported that over the years this has not had a significant impact
Page | 42
on much of the structural qualities of the hostel (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) The
structural sturdiness of the hostel is said to have been mitigated through precautions
such as drainage and the assembly of lsquowellrsquo positioned pavements (Demacon 2014)
According to the ward councillor there are a few women and children living in the
hostel although it is not quite clear how many They are however not recognised as
lsquolegitimatersquo residence of Sethokga (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Arguably a
number of the hostel redevelopment conversion projects that have taken place
across the country have been as a response to the prevailing presence of women
and children who had come to live in the hostel The fact that this hostel has
remained predominantly male occupied presents a number contextual dimensions
to the hostel conversion project This will be explored in chapter five which will
examine the conceptualisation of the hostel conversion project
According to Thurman (1997) it is not uncommon in hostels for up to three families to
live in one room measuring 20 square metres Such rooms were designed to
accommodate two to three workers or even up to twenty people to share a sink a
shower and toilet (Thurman 1997) Yet lsquowholersquo families ie husbands wives children
or extended families have not moved into Sethokga Overcrowding remains a
concern and privacy is scarce in the hostel (Demacon 2014) The dormitories have
very limited physical space and little room for manoeuvre The typical floor plan of a
hostel is provided on the next page and depicts the rigid rudimentary and restrained
design of the hostel compound Sethokga hostel has identical floor plans and
elevations
Page | 43
Floor plan of a typical dormitory compound
Source Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
Figure 1 Ground Floor Plan
Figure 2 First Floor Plan
Figure 3 Elevation
Page | 44
312 Locality
The hostel is situated in the East Rand region of the Gauteng province within the
municipal administrative jurisdiction of the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (EMM)
in the Kempton Park ndash Tembisa Customer Care Area It is located in the north-eastern
region region B of the EMM in the township of Tembisa and lies to the south of the
Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and to the east of the City of Johannesburg
Moreover the hostel is lies between the Kempton Park Pretoria railway link near
Oakmoor station thus a multipurpose and inter-as well as intra-regional public
transport node It is well serviced in terms of public transport and easily accessible
from the R21 (Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
Map 2 Locality map
Source Google maps 2015
Source EkurhuleniGIS 2015
Page | 45
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex
313 Local and municipal context
Tembisa is one of the largest townships in the metro and it is situated in region A of the
EMM towards the north-western end of the municipality The hostel lies in ward four of
the metro to the east of Midrand and to the west of one of the most affluent suburbs
in region A Glen Marais along with other high income areas such as Serengeti Golf
Estate Midstream and the suburb of Edenvale (Demacon 2014)
The Integrated Development Plan (IDP) for the Oakmoor area Area 19 of the metrorsquos
Local Integrated Development Plan (LIDP) was last prepared in 2000 The report
contained among its leading aims to establish an integrated framework to guide and
facilitate development interventions in the area (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000) It was documented in the report that the SDP would guide the
Page | 46
municipalityrsquos decisions in the development and management of the area in a way
that the report articulates as follows by encouraging and setting the framework for
private sector investment and initiatives and by seeking to strengthen economic
activity in the area through the identification of specific projects and programmes
which would kick-start development and lastly working towards improving service
delivery (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) The report reviews the
historically context of the area and argues that basically no provision was made for
service delivery or the adequate management of land and no consideration of land
use imperatives was given This was the case throughout the Tembisa Township (SJN
Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Furthermore the report established that the general land-use pattern across most of
the township was mainly comprised of residential developments It was in this 2000
Integrated Development Plan that it was overtly and in retrospect alluded to that
Tembisa had been established to function at that time as a dormitory settlement for
the neighbouring economic centres of the East Rand region such as Kempton Park
Olifantsfontein and Midrand (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
An abstract in 2000 SDF report(SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000 stated
the following that investigations had confirmed that the Sethokga hostel buildings
were structurally sound except for some weather proofing of external walls and basic
finishes to walls floors and ceiling Some repair work to cracks and precautions to pre-
empt future cracking may be necessary but the hostel blocks would offer little
difficulty in terms of conversion into single and family units According to the report
there seemed to be more problems with engineering services For example the
internal sewer reticulation was said to be so dilapidated that it may have needed to
be replaced entirely Parts of the water supply network would need to be replaced
fire hydrants installed electricity supply upgraded and grading of roads and storm-
water disposal required substantial attention (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
When the completed report was presented in 2000 it set out a case that the
municipality was currently negotiating with a non-profit organisation to acquire hostel
land and convert the hostel buildings into single and family units and manage such
housing stock (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) It further documented
that the lsquoultimatersquo number of dwelling units would be about 1200 with the first phase
of development to deliver 500 units The report suggested that the development
would be undertaken by an external organisation and that few planning guidelines
Page | 47
would need to be proposed to harmonize Sethokga hostel residential complex with
the rest of the Tembisa Township In the report it is assumed that the hostel conversion
would should result in a lsquosecurity complexrsquo type of housing development and
access to the complex would be gained mainly from local distributors such as the
extension of MbizaIzimbongi Street and Nyarhi Street (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000)
The report argued for change in the household profile of the hostel and this would
result in an increased demand for additional social facilities such as schools cregraveches
churches libraries play area(s) etc It was found in the report that space intensive (in
terms of size) social facilities eg cregraveches and a multipurpose centre should be
encouraged within the complex (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Additionally limited retail specifically corner shops should be established within the
complex Lastly the report suggested that it was important to align the services in the
area with the rest of the EMM and ensure adequate capacity at points where the
services connected into the hostel Roads in particular were highlighted as important
in this regard to ensure continuity and appropriate distribution of traffic movement
What is more the report states that traffic should be discouraged within the new
settlement (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
The SDF marked the entire Sethokga hostel complex as lsquohostel upgradingrsquo married to
public open space within the vicinity of the complex churches sports fields and
mixed use areas were proposed in the SDF (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
Page | 48
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework (SDF) 2000
The development proposals in the 2000 Oakmoor area19 SDF proposed that Sethokga hostel be
Redeveloped into family units The SDF also proposed mixed use nodal developments within and around
the Oakmoor area and proposed additional facilities such as cregraveches schools and recreational
facilities in certain areas
Source SJN Development Planning Consultants Planning Area 19 Oakmoor Development
Plan Development Proposals Final Report 2000
This SDF for the area is quite old and has not been updated
since this 2000 plan
Sethokga
hostel
Page | 49
There are 22 hostels across Ekurhuleni which are spread across six regions in the metro
(Demacon 2014) Region A has two hostels of which one is government owned
region B has three hostels of which government owns two regions C D and E hosts
one hostel respectively while region F has sixteen hostels (it is not clear how many are
owned by government) (Demacon 2014)
In terms of social facilities and amenities the study area is situated within a 3km radius
from two schools Rabasotho Combined School and Philena Middle School It is also
within a 2km radius from a healthcare facility - Esselen Park Satellite Clinic - and within
a 1km radius from a sporting facility - Esselen Park Sports School of Excellence
(Demacon 2014) The nearest police station is roughly 6km away and a lsquogenerousrsquo
number of shopping as well as entertainment centres are found within a 15 to 20km
radius of the hostel The nearest taxi route is less than 100m with the nearest train
stations including the Tembisa Limindlela and Kaalfontein stations all falling within a
10km radius (Demacon 2014)
In 2013 the Tembisa economy contributed 83 to the overall economy of the EMM
whilst Ekurhuleni contributed 253 to the overall economy of the Gauteng province
in 2013 (Demacon 2014) Sethokga hostel forms part of the Kempton Park Tembisa
precinct and according the Sethokga Hostels Mixed Typology Market Analysis Report
it falls within the development context of the Kempton Park Tembisa precinct It hosts
a range of housing typologies supported under various housing programmes
(Demacon 2014) which include but are not limited to Informal Settlement Upgrading
programmes and projects Integrated Residential Development Programmes(s) and
Gap Market Housing Units According to this report there also exists several
opportunities for the development of medium to higher density residential
developments (Demacon 2014) The EMMs 2010 Metropolitan Spatial Development
Framework suggests that among the several intentions of the metro the EMM will seek
to expand the affordable housing market and that it will seek to accommodate a
wider range of the metrorsquos populace by making a range of housing options available
for people across different income groupings (Demacon 2014)
This next section exhibits the lsquoambiencersquo of Sethokga hostel as it currently stands It
delves into some detail regarding the current setting of the hostel and takes the
reader through the authorrsquos experience being in the hostel and lsquotravellingrsquo through its
narrow corridors It shares my experience of going into this dauntingly male
dominated environment riddled with metaphorical tones of disempowerment
despondency and neglect All the images displayed here were taken by the author
Page | 50
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel
In terms of its infrastructure the hostel is said to still be somewhat structurally sound
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005) Aesthetically however it appears quite old and rundown
and leaves a lot to be desired The neglected state of refuse and rubble removal
adds to the wear and tear appearance of the hostel Each of the blocks that make-
up the hostel consists of separate dormitories and entry into each dormitory is gained
through a common access point - a door - that leads into a communal area with a
basic cooking and dining area There are no ceilings in any of the dormitories The
paint-work both inside and outside has long worn out In general the hostel appears
especially dull and unsightly
321 Built form architecture
Figure 4
The hostel is old and run-down
The adjoining hostel blocks are lined with a
number of lsquoinformalrsquo traders
This area that leads into one of the hostel
blocks is where a resident displays his goods
for selling
Page | 51
A number of the men have cars which they
park in their respective blocks
Walk-up that leads into one of the dorms
that is later photographed and shows the
condition of the interior of the hostel
The hostel is in an obvious state of neglect
and refuse removal is ignored
I spotted a number of chickens roaming about
in the hostel and a small vegetable garden
near one of the entrances into a dorm
There is one entry and exit point into most of
the blocks in the hostel
Page | 52
Figure 5
This is a communal cooking area It was said
that because the stove is so old and has a
number of issues the electricity powering the
stove is never turned off and so it runs
constantly through the day and night time
The area next to the cooking area is where
groceries and other goods are stored for
safe-keeping
This communal dining area also leads into
the rest of the dorm and the place where the
hostel dwellers sleep
None of the dorms have ceilings or any
added furnishings (ie lighting) The hostel
has never been re-painted or renovated
since it was built in the early 1980s
Page | 53
This corridor leads into the bedrooms where
the men sleep Sheets andor curtains lead to
what felt like very restricted distressing and
unpleasent living quarters
The compartments offer very limited room to
move around and offer little privacy There
are two beds per compartment with up to
three people sharing a bed The living
conditions are as what Ramphele (1993)
described as constraining to varying degrees
since it is a physically restricted environment
with blurred boundaries of personal private
space The physical proximity to others offers
practically no prospect for privacy or liberty
to accommodate visitors
Page | 54
Figure 6
322 Municipal amenities
Male urinal
Communal toilet
Communal shower
Most of the hostel blocks in the hostel have
electricity yet it seems to be offered for
free
The entrance (door) leading to the one
communal shower and toilet facility There is
one bathroom per dorm
Page | 55
Figure 7
323 The adjoining area
Most of the blocks in the hostels have
communal indoor as well as outdoor taps
with running water provided without
charge
lsquoInformalrsquo activity trade takes place in
and around the hostel
The council offices are situated adjacent to
one of the hostel blocks across the street
The municipality does not collect refuse in
the hostel so it is up to the hostel residents to
dispose of their refuse (it was not clear why
the municipality did not collect refuse in the
hostel)
Page | 56
According to the (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) entry and access to the hostel are
determined by ones ability to negotiate for a bed Much like what was described by
Ramphele (1993) the closest likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo in hostels was in the form
of a bed this persists at Sethokga To some extent every aspect of life and survival in
Sethokga revolves around a bed
One gains entry into Sethokga through a block chairperson (Sololo interview 2015)
Some of the functions and responsibilities of these block chairpersonrsquos is to know what
is happening in that particular hostel block The illustration given by the economic
representative for the ward Mr Sololo was that
ldquoWhatever which has been happening in a particular block the chairperson
should be aware of it and should call a meeting Letrsquos say if you are sitting in a
block here and you have got a jukebox and you find that you are selling
liquor and now they tell you that by 10 orsquoclock you close down and the music
should be off Then you do not comply with that the block chairperson will
report you to the hostel committee and they will sit and come up with a fine
for you if you do not listen even after they fine you they will chase you out of
the hostelrdquo
According to Sololo interview (2015) the block chairpersons maintain peace and
order and need to ensure that any conflict is mediated They are elected by the
residents of a given block and are entrusted with their grievances Ideally they should
be first point of contact before anything is to be escalated to the ward councillor ie
if a pipe bursts and they are without water This would need to be reported to the
EMM by either the block chairperson and if the problem remains unresolved it is then
escalated to the ward councillor (Sololo interview 2015)
33 Conclusion
Chapter three has explored a number of elements which model the status quo of the
study field Ironically the conditions in the hostel are not much different to many of
the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg Sethokga hostel also resembles
many other hostels across the country The hostel is overcrowded there is little room
to manoeuvre and there is an obvious lack of privacy The hostel is a possible health
hazard to those who live in it
Page | 57
This chapter shared some of my own experience of the hostel My experience consisted out
of being in the hostel taking photographs in and around the hostel and engaging with the
living environment Inside the hostel I was engulfed by its narrow poorly lit and what felt like
stifling corridors Corridors divided by curtains and sheets led into what were very confined
sleeping compartments Beds offer a place of rest for those who have voluntarily or
involuntarily sought refuge in the hostel Many after all consider the hostels as a lsquobetterrsquo
alternative to homelessness The experience for me was unlike any I have ever felt since the
circumstance of my life has provided a certain comfort that was surely challenged in the
modest time that I spent at Sethokga Chapter four examines what has been the states
approach to hostel conversion
Page | 58
The statesrsquo approach to hostel conversion
4 Introduction
The discussion in this chapter will reflect and review South African state policy post-1994
that concerns hostels Chapter four will also critically discuss and describe the
fundamentals of what have been considered two of the leading approaches to hostel
redevelopment conversion namely the Hostel Redevelopment Programmes (HRP) and
the Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach
There have been a number of state interventions post-1994 that have seemingly been a
lsquosignrsquo of governments lsquodesirersquo to improve the living conditions of not just hostel residents
but of a vast majority of South Africanrsquos who were subjected to poor living conditions
(Thurman 1997) However for the purpose of this study there will be particular focus on
interventions around hostels In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005) concur with a few
other authors that during post democracy the South African government introduced
along with other housing programmes a hostel upgrading conversion programme
aimed primarily at converting hostels into integrated family-oriented developments
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
South Africarsquos housing policy was launched in 1994 and the housing subsidy scheme
promised to deliver one million houses in five years (UrbanLankMark 2011) This would be
delivered through a range of subsidy mechanisms (UrbanLankMark 2011) According to
Dyiki interview(2015) in 1995 or about 1996 a National Hostel Redevelopment Policy was
approved and was among one of the primary national housing programmes (Dyiki
interview 2015) To facilitate nation-building and effective state formation it was believed
that social programmes such as state funded housing programmes would play a pivotal
role in this regard (Netshitenzhe 2011) Moreover the nation-building agenda saw the
government set the country bold and far-reaching goals and these somewhat became
associated with certain policies ideologies and norms (Netshitenzhe 2011) However
redundant budgetary rituals inadequate feasibility studies weak project evaluation
bureaucratic inefficiency managing community expectations and political interference
have been some of the issues that have held back progress (von Holdt 2010 and
Pienaar 2010) As a result housing provided by government has often been poorly
Page | 59
located and in some respect it has continued to perpetuate a reality of spatial
segregation (Charlton et al 2014)
This next section will describe how the hostel conversion approach has been articulated
through state policy through subsequent grants and schemes
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach
Through the provision of grants and schemes government has made efforts to provide
funding for the redevelopment conversion of hostels However there has been
somewhat of a bias on public sector hostels as the grants are provided mainly for the
redevelopment conversion of hostels owned by municipalities or provincial government
(Department of Human Settlements 2015) In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
provide a synopsis of some of governmentsrsquo earliest approaches to addressing lsquothe hostel
issuersquo (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) This is summarised as follows
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Peoples Housing Process
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme (this will be discussed in
section 42)
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Arguably the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units
Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of state efforts to grapple with the vast
challenges around hostels hostel life and the social ills that have become endemic to
hostels (Dyiki 2006) The essence of the approaches listed below was that hostels would
be redeveloped converted to create sustainable human living conditions To re-
integrated these hostel communities into the surrounding township communities (Pienaar
and Cloete 2005)
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership was premised on
the notion that Developers this could also include the municipality would be able to
submit project proposals for the development of housing on stands that were serviced for
people who qualified in terms of eligibility criteria eg a combined household income of
Page | 60
the beneficiary versus the available subsidy amount provided by the state Households
would then be required to contribute to the development (that is the construction of their
house) from their own savings or through what was referred to as lsquosweet equityrsquo
(providing their own material and labour) Locational and geographic factors would also
affect the amount of the subsidy by 2005 Pienaar and Cloete (2005) noted that this
subsidy had delivered an approximate 13 million homes which were primarily low-cost
free-standing
In the case of hostels redevelopment one option was that the subsidy could be used to
build new free-standing dwellings for individual full title ownership on unused portions of
land within hostel complexes This option would require sub-division of the land as well as
the installation of additional service Under the provisions of the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme another option would be to convert existing dormitories into family
apartments that could be sold off to beneficiaries under sectional title This sectional title
is a form of ownership where an individual holds title to a dwelling unit it can be a free-
standing unit or part of a multi-unit storey building The individual owns title together
with all the other owners of sectional dwellings on that property an undivided share of the
land on which the dwellings are built (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) However the challenge
was that where existing dormitories were converted and sold under title the projects
would be exposed to a host of problems that sectional title properties generally
encountered in low-income areas in the private sector ie poor management and
maintenance and difficulties in collecting levies and service debts (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process
The Peoplersquos Housing Process was reportedly introduced to enable communities
particularly those in disadvantaged areas to participate in the provision of their own
housing without the participation interference or involvement of private developers
However technical and administrative support and consultation would be offered by
Housing Support Organisations which were approved to serve this function (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005) What were termed as facilitation grants would be made available by the
government to lsquokick-startrsquo the housing projects The beneficiaries could apply for a grant
to pay for the services rendered by the Housing Support Organisation(s) and the housing
subsidy would be the same as for what was contained in the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) hostel residents could as a
community collective make use of this avenue as a means of obtaining ownership of an
improved residence with the assistance of their local authority a non-governmental
Page | 61
organisation (NGO) or perhaps a cluster of professions who could provide support and
administrative assistance as their Housing Support Organisation (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing was introduced in 1995 and was essentially a
variant of the project-linked subsidy provided to non-profit institutions independent of
government and registered as legally approved entities Households earning less than
R3500 per month would be provided through this subsidy with subsidised rental housing
by these entities In 1995 when the subsidy was introduced it carried a once-off capital
grant of R16 000 per dwelling but by 2002 the amount had increased to R27 000 as part of
the governmentrsquos aspiration to promote medium density housing Pienaar and Cloete
(2005) note that because the hostel redevelopment programme had been in limbo for
several years at the time of their study the Institutional Subsidy approach had been
considered as a viable alternative to accelerate hostel conversion projects The tenure
options under this subsidy it was proposed would include
Rental
Co-operative ownership
An instalment sale option in the form of a lsquorent to buyrsquo practice with a
minimum rental period of four years to qualify for the conversion to ownership
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Under the National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
the National Housing Code (for subsidised housing) delineates subsidised housing as
Permanent residential structures that have security of tenure both internal
and external privacy
Housing that has portable water serviced with adequate energy and sanitary
facilities
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing were set
to give effect to the objectives of the Housing Act 1997 which came into effect on 1 April
Page | 62
1998 To ensure quality and durable housing products that complied with particular
minimum standards (National Housing Report 2009) For instance dwellings had to have
a minimum gross floor area of 30m2 but this has since been amended (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005)
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country
Some international interest has been generated to consider intervention in hostels and
efforts to redevelopingconverting hostels The point of this section is to illustrate that
hostels occupied and in some respect have continued to occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are one of many representations of
the physical manifestation of three centuries of systematic racial discrimination and
economic exploitation (Thurman 1997) The consolidation of the migrant labour system
through hostels the poor living conditions of hostels the dishonour of hostel life and the
control they exert on the African populace Saw hostels gaining the attention of a
number of international agencies and authorities who put resources towards and took an
interest in reconfiguring the disposition of hostels (Dyiki interview 2015)
In the period between August 2002 and April 2003 the USAID (United States Agency for
International Development) extended its support to community based approaches to
housing in South Africa and in turn created a platform where it would have input(s) into
South Africarsquos national housing policy (Urban Sector Network 2003)
Hostel redevelopment was supported under a grant provision provided by the USAID this
had two main objectives The first was that policy and information dissemination should
serve as key objectives and secondly that USAID would have a voice in the facilitation of
hostel redevelopments Initially the grant was meant to run from 23 August 2000 to 30
August 2002 but an extension was requested and the grant extended for the period 1
September 2002 to 30 April 2003 (Urban Sector Network 2003) Additionally the on-goings
of the programme instituted under the grant were to include the following activities
Identifying and conducting research into tenure options and feasible
management models for hostels
Identifying possible needs and challenges and to then conduct nation-wide
research in the hostel sector
Facilitating workshops and consolidating policy submissions and to submit
research papers to the Department of Housing
Page | 63
To publish research papers
To conduct mid-term and final evaluation of the programme
Conducting information outreaches where the USN (Urban Sector Network) would
play an essential role in informing government the private sector as well as
communities about the opportunities which could be created through the
redevelopment of hostels (Urban Sector Network2003)
The Urban Sector Network (USN) then proceeded to make specific recommendations on
the hostel redevelopment approach The USN called for the broadening on the scope of
the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme to include all hostels (private and
grey sector) and not just public sector hostel Recommendations were made that the
norms and standards for the redeveloped hostels should be developed along with
national guidelines for the management of redeveloped hostels by local authorities They
advocated for stronger support for co-operative housing The redevelopment of hostels
to be approached in an integrated and holistic manner and hostels should not be
redeveloped in an isolated manner The subsidy amount for hostels redevelopment and
social facilitation needed to be increased Lastly that hostels redevelopment should
support livelihood strategies and capacity building and training of hostel residents during
the redevelopment process was essential (Urban Sector Network 2003)
The USN proposed a departure from the public sector hostel redevelopment bias of the
Hostel Redevelopment plan (Urban Sector Network 2003)
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme (HRP)
In principal the Hostel Redevelopment Programme supported an unambiguous bias in
favour of public sector hostels (Dyiki 2006) Public sector hostels are those hostels
owned by either provincial or local authorities that offered accommodation to workers
from a range of industries (Thurman 1997) Grey sector hostels (in which the structures
wereare owned by private companies but the land by a provincial or local authority
and private sector hostels) did not form part of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme
(Dyiki 2006) The biggest limitation and challenge of the HRP was in its narrow focus on
solely the conversion of hostels beds (Thurman 1997) The aim of the HRP was to provide
a subsidy allocation that was based per bed but it was criticised as being impractical
and unfeasible and not adequately addressing the issue of housing provision (Dyiki
2006) Dyiki interview (2015) believes that the challenge of the HRP was that it was not
talking to individuals but rather it was a subsidy given to the state to improve the hostel
and the standard of living in the hostel Since most of the public sector hostels were
Page | 64
managed by the municipalities the municipalities received the subsidy and the
residents of the hostels therefore had very little say in how the subsidy could in effect be
used The other challenge was that grey sector and public sector hostels were not part
of the subsidy (Dyiki interview 2015)
The Hostel Redevelopment Programme was perhaps the earliest strategy conceived by
the South African government as a national policy aiming to
Promote habitable and humane conditions in hostel conversions
Ensure the involvement of hostel residents the surroundingneighbouring
community and relevant (publicprivate) authorities and any other entity
affected by the project are involved in the decision-making processes
Facilitate and promote social integration within hostel communities and the
hostels and adjacent communities
Put measures in place to accommodate any persons displaced by the hostel
conversion project
Empower promote economic development and seeks to be development-
oriented
According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment
Programme was largely based on the premise that this programme would make some
provisions for grant funding from the central government towards the conversion or
upgrading of hostels particularly public sector or grey-sector hostels This will be done with
the broad aim of the programme to facilitate and create living conditions for residents
that are humane and hygienic by providing prospects for housing options that are
affordable and sustainable With tenure options for
Rental
Possible ownership for those at the lower income scale
Upon its conception a capital subsidy of R16 000 was initially proposed per family or R4
000 per individual Additionally to be eligible for this programme hostel redevelopment
programmes would need to be
Planned and implemented in a participative and comprehensive manner
with the requirement that interest groups would need to be established
Based on socio-economic studies undertaken to determine and consider the
needs and affordability aspect of those who would be affected (ie stand to
benefit from the project)
Page | 65
Unfailing in ensuring that there is no displacement of residents unless
alternative accommodation is provided
Sustainable with regards to the on-going payments of maintenance and any
other related costs
Purposeful to augment employment opportunities for the hostel residents as
well as the locals in the construction and on-going maintenance of the
project
The broad aim of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme (Mdunyelwa 2015) was to
convert these historically male-occupied spaces which were also subsequently meant
for migrant labourers to family units But it will be done in such a way to able and
capacitate the accommodation of the families of these men In some way but perhaps
not explicitly stated in the Hostel Redevelopment Programme policy brief there is an
element of urbanisation that is implied Therefore it was an attempt to somewhat
encourage the men to relocate their families from their rural home-base (Mdunyelwa
2015)
The shortcomings of the HRP in how it had a restricted focus on hostel beds and
somewhat of an oversight on the complexity of the configuration of hostels saw it being
replaced by the Community Residential Units Programme (CRU) (Pienaar 2010) Dyiki
interview (2015) in my interview with him argued that the CRU Programme unlike the HRP
contains a lot more detail that was perhaps missed in the HRP He further suggested that
the CRU Programme could be considered somewhat of a lsquocost recoveryrsquo strategy by
government to recoup some of the monies spent on these projects As the CRU
programme has a strong rental housing stock component to it (Dyiki interview 2015)
44 The Community Residential Units Programme (CRU Programme)
The Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme has since replaced the National
Hostel Redevelopment Programme At the time of this study there are approximately
2000 public hostels across the country with a vast majority of them still needing to be
afforded some attention and measures to redevelop them (Demacon 2014) According
to the Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the CRU Programme (2006)
the CRU Programme aims to facilitate the provision of secure and stable rental tenure for
lower income persons Furthermore stating that the programme seeks to provide a
framework for addressing the many and varied forms of existing public sector residential
accommodation as the previous approach under the HRP only considered a ldquoper-bedrdquo
Page | 66
approach that proved unfavourable on a number of occasions (CRU Programme Policy
Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme is believed to provide a lsquobetterrsquo suited programme and a coherent
framework to assist in dealing with a vast range of public stock which has for the most
part been indecisively and incomprehensively dealt with (Demacon 2014) The CRU
Programme targets low income individuals as well as households with an average R 3500
monthly income and who have not been able to find suitable accommodation
According to the CRU Programme in the years leading up to 2006 there was an
approximate 4512 of households nationally which fall within the R0-R800 income groups
currently renting and an approximate 4027 falling within the R801 ndash R3200 income
groups (CRU Programme Policy Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme intends to cover the following areas
a) Public hostels that are owned by Provincial Housing Departments and municipalities
b) ldquoGreyrdquo hostels which are hostel that have both a public and private ownership
component due to historical reasons
c) Public housing stock that forms part of the ldquoEnhanced Extended Discount Benefit
Schemerdquo but which cannot be transferred to individual ownership and has to be
managed as rental accommodation by the public owner
d) Post-1994 newly developed public residential accommodation owned by provincial
housing departments and municipalities
e) Existing dysfunctional abandoned andor distressed buildings in inner city or township
areas that have been taken over by a municipality and funded by housing funds
(Department of Human Settlements 2015)
The CRU programme policy document is quite a laborious document In general the CRU
programme seeks to promote and advance the provision of rental options for lower
income groups facilitate communication and participation of residents throughout the
process provide a variety of rental stock and provide secure and stable rental stock This
will be done by what the CRU Programme articulates as providing a realistic funding
programme (Department of Human Settlements 2015)
According to the CRU programme rental stock provided by the programme is to be
owned by either a provincial housing department or a municipality However this has
been a seriously contested position on the part of the individuals and households
affected by the programme who want home ownership (Dyiki interview 2015)
Page | 67
45 Conclusion
There have been a number of projects over the past several years which have in part
articulated the states aspiration to reconfigure the lsquoway of lifersquo in hostels The Hostel
Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units Programme are
considered to have been the leading approaches to reconfiguring hostels within the
countryrsquos broader landscape Whether hostels have or do not have a place in
democratic South Africa is part of what this study is looking to explore
Chapter five introduces the Sethokga hostel conversion project and in principal seeks to
unpack the conceptualisation of the project while reflecting on the findings of the
interviews
Page | 68
The Sethokga hostel conversion project
5 Introduction
Chapter five will examine the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seek to unpack
how the project has been conceptualised Discussing the main components of the
project its main stakeholders the project phases exploring what are its defining
characteristics the broad vision and aim of the project how the project has understood
the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn set to address them and then also
in what way(s) the residents of the hostel have been involved in the project Furthermore
this chapter will examine what the project considers important in terms of gender issues
what have been some limitations of the project while it also considers what the
anticipated impact and benefit of the project is
Lastly and in view of the interviews that were conducted chapter five discusses how the
residents of the hostel and the community of Tembisa and greater Ekurhuleni will know
that the project has been completed and has been successful By and large this chapter
offers testament of the findings from the field work and reviews the rationale of the
Sethokga conversion project To conclude this chapter a collage of diagrams and
images will be presented to provide the reader with greater insight(s) into the Sethokga
hostel conversion project
51 Outline of the main components of the project
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project
There have been a number of stakeholders involved in the Sethokga hostel conversion
project the main stakeholders include
o The Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement (GPDHS)
o LTE Consulting
o The Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
o The ward councillor and various community committees and leaders
o The Sethokga Hostel residents
o The community of Tembisa
Page | 69
The roles of the stakeholders are summarised as follows National government is the key
funder of the Sethokga hostel conversion project the funds are transferred to the GPDHS
who have to then ensure that the costs of the project are managed LTE Consulting is a
consulting company appointed by the GPDHS for the oversight and construction of the
Sethokga hostel conversion project They work in collaboration with the EMM (the local
authority) and its various departments such as the services department the energy
department quality assurance etc However the GPDHS remains the lsquomain decision-
makerrsquo and lsquocustodianrsquo of the project with the lead oversight on the budget and
programmeproject management The project manager Mr Sisa Majikijela is the official
from the GPDHS that is directly responsible for supervision and coordination of the
project The ward councillor and the various community committees leaders facilitate
avenues of communication and engagement between the officials (from province the
EMM and LTE) with the residents of Sethokga and community lsquoAs the eyes and ears on
the groundrsquo (Majikijela interview 2015) ideally the ward councillor and various
community committees leaders have an important role to play in ensuring that the
Sethokga residents and community will be the rightful recipients of the project The
Sethokga hostel residents and broader community have a vested interest in the project
because it stands to affect andor benefit them (Sololo interview2015)
Once the project is completed with the family units fully constructed (ie with furnishings
such as trees plants parking bays and so forth) and the services installed The project will
be handed over to the EMM for on-going administration maintenance and the
collection of rentals (Shibambo interview 2015) The Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlement in collaboration with the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and LTE
Consulting play a key role as facilitates of the conversion of Sethokga hostel into family
units (Majikijela interview 2015)
522 Project phases
The data regarding the project phases was easily accessible and generously provided by
the consulting resident engineer and the architect providing me with a market analysis
study and a few other key documents The development concept of the hostel
conversion project divides the project into three phases and further subdivides each of
the phases into two phases phases A and B (Demacon 2014)
Initial studies (ie pre-feasibility studies) were done in 2008 but the demolition of the first
four blocks of the hostel demolished for the current phase 1A only took place in August of
2011 and it was anticipated that phase 1A would be completed and handed over to the
Page | 70
municipality by the end of 2014 but this did not happen (Majikijela interview 2015) At the
time of conducting fieldwork between the months of August and September 2015 it was
said that phase 1A was near completion with just the landscaping parking and water
provision left to completed (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
Phase 1A of the project was meant to bring to completion a total of 240 units
accommodating 1 194 people to provide 69 parking bays (one per four units) a total of
54 one bedroom units 117 two bedroom units and 69 three bedroom units at an average
unit size of 324m2 477m2 and 588m2 for the one two and three bedrooms respectively
(Demacon 2014) However only a total of 222 units have been built and this shortfall was
largely attributed to the underlying dolomite geological conditions of the site (Bako and
Shibambo interview 2015)
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
The Sethokga hostel conversion project has been administered under the CRU
programme and forms part of a national agenda to convert hostels into family units
(Dyiki interview 2015) The target group under the CRU programme is individuals and
households earning between R800 and R3 500 per month who are able to enter what the
CRU programme has termed the lsquoformal private rental and social housing marketrsquo
(Demacon 2014)
The new residential units (the family units) are situated on ervan 128 and 5729 of the
Sethokga complex within the administrative jurisdiction of the Kempton Park Customer
Care Area (CCA) which is the administrative body conducting oversight of development
and town planning affairs for the Tembisa and Kempton Park areas (Demacon 2014)
The family units are three storey walk-ups and appear somewhat spacious and far more
appealing than the hostel structures The CRU proposes that bachelorsone bedroom
units of 20m2 to 35m2 should be allocated at a monthly rental of R270 ndash R450 a two
bedroom unit of 35m2-45m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R450 to R850 and
that a three bedroom unit of 45m2-80m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R850 ndash
R1650 Rentals have been and remain a contestation in a number of hostel conversion
projects across the country and Sethokga is no different According to the economic
representative for the ward Sololo interview (2015) the residents of Sethokga hostel are
contesting that they want to pay R150 for a one bedroom unit R200 for a two bedroom
unit and R300 for a three bedroom unit
According to the principles of the CRU programme the ownership of the rental housing
stock is to be reserved by either the Gauteng Provincial Department of Human
Page | 71
Settlement (GPDHS) or the EMM The ownership of the family units can be transferred by
the GPDHS to the EMM in line with the Housing Act no right(s) of ownership can be
transferred to tenants (Pienaar 2010)
The process of the Sethokga hostel conversion has on an administrative and government
support level been facilitated through a grant allocation from national government to
province (GPDHS) This grant has made provisions for pre-feasibility studies
socialcommunity facilitation the relocationreallocation of some residents (within the
hostel or to alternative sites to make way for demolition and construction of phase 1A)
and the consideration and compensation of construction costs and professional fees
(Majikijela interview 2015) The allocation of the units determining rental structures
applying indigent relief measures where necessary rental collection and maintenance
as well as the management of the family units are factors determined by the GPDHS and
the EMM cooperatively (Sololo interview 2015) The hostel residents are then at some
level consulted and lsquoencouragedrsquo to participate in this regard (Dyiki interview 2015)
Seemingly throughout project implementation the stakeholders have been kept informed
of the status and progress of the project With respect to notifying the hostel residents and
general public notices are placed in and around the hostel to inform them of meetings
and the ward councillorrsquos office take the lead on this (Mthethwa interview 2015)
There have been a number of communitypublic meetings that have taken place as the
project has progressed From the fieldwork I was not able to draw on precisely how many
meetings had taken place since or precisely when the meetings took place or what was
discussed in each of those meetings Generally the ward councillor said at least once a
month a consultative and progress report meeting would take place between the
various stakeholders where officials would engage the hostel residents and general
public
According to Majikijela interview (2015) the ward councillor and the economic rep the
main area of involvement on the part of the hostel residents has been in providing
labour A small percentage of the residents have been involved in the construction-work
and some of the clerical work on the project Their involvement in discussions on the
project is said to often be arbitrarily halted by political interference (Sololo interview
2015) For instance Bako interview (2015) the architect recalled that on the design of the
family units Liefa Architects did not talk to the end user ie the residents to ask them
what they wanted Instead a design which was informed by other examples of similar
projects was presented to the residents of Sethokga and the general public (Bako
interview 2015) ldquoThe design of the hostel was not lsquoexclusiversquo to Sethokga and its contextrdquo
(Bako interview 2015)
Page | 72
In relation to the size of the hostel and its residents only a very small percentage of the
hostel residents have been employed in the project the December 2013 January 2014
labour records reported the following
Table 1
Total workforce 66
Females 7
Males 59
Youth 28
Adults 38
Semi-skilled 20
Skilled 22
Disabled 0
General workers 24
Source LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor report
I was fortunate to have attended one of the community meetings that were held at an
old community hall within the vicinity of the hostel This meeting took place on a
Saturday the 15th of August 2015 and it was quite the experience There was a relatively
strong police presence at the meeting The police kept watch and managed the
activities inside and outside the community hall As there were concerns that the
proceedings might get out of hand and a possible tussle between those in attendance
might arise The meeting was chaired by the ward councillor and aside from the residents
of Sethokga in attendance was one official from the GPDHS an official from the EMM
community leaders and ANC committee members
There was an obvious and overwhelming male presence in the meeting tempers ran
high and there was an observable resistance from the residents of Sethokga to the
presence of the three females in the meeting This included me and two female
committee members Several times the meeting was disrupted by shouts and echoes of
discontentment questioning what women were doing at a meeting for men lsquordquothey have
no place here they do not even live hererdquo were the words of some of the men Our
presence seemed to really infuriate some of the men This was similar to what Ramphele
(1993) Segal (1991) Thurman (1997) and Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) observed in
their work and suggested that even now and within the context of Sethokga that the
men in the hostel are still quite at odds with having women as a part of their lsquogathering of
Page | 73
menrsquo and possibly even living among them The demeanour of some of the men in this
meeting suggested that they found the presence and role of women in these meetings
unneeded It was evident that these men had become far too accustomed to living
lsquoalonersquo as men Ramphele (1993) noted that the idea of an unambiguous constant and
unrestricted presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a serious point
of contention for some of men Some men expressed unwillingness while others a
struggle to comprehend or endorse this change that seemed overly unfamiliar and
challenging to come to grips with (Ramphele 1993) From my observation in this meeting
the same seems to hold true for Sethokga
The purpose of the meeting was to consult the hostel residents who were identified to be
the first recipients beneficiaries of the allocating of family units to consult them on issues
of final rental proposals allocation processes and status of the project The invitation for
this meeting was apparently only extended to those particular individuals but
subsequently the meeting was taken over by those who had objections to the process of
allocation rentals and why the meeting sought to exclude them and divide the residents
Generally the meeting was unruly and the ward councillor as well as the community
leaders and committee members struggled to manage the crowd and the rampant
tempers in the room
The agenda for the meeting is provided below to provide the reader with some context
and outline of the intension of the meeting Unfortunately tempers ran especially high in
this meeting and in my opinion none of the items on the agenda were successfully
addressed
Page | 74
Figure 8 August 15 community meeting agenda
Source Sethokga Community meeting 2015
521 Broad vision and aim of the project
The vision and aim of the project was described by the key informants who to some
extent unanimously used the following key words integration sustainability community
participation to improve peoplersquos lives restoring honour addressing the ills of hostel life
and bringing families into a safe and secure environment The housing officer for me
captured well the overall sentiments of the key informants when he said ldquowe are
surrounded and have so many companies in Tembisa so clearly you will find letrsquos say a
white guy working in the area but then they travel to Kempton Park or some other area
outside Tembisa and that is where they live So it would be nice to see him living in
Sethokga The project is about integration and not just integrating the residents of
Page | 75
Sethokga to the rest of the township but other ways of integration like racial integration
That is what I want to seerdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015)
Additionally the broad vision and aim of the hostel conversion project is to instil a culture
of payment into not just the hostel but the broader community ldquoPeople cannot just keep
wanting everything for free government cannot afford itrdquo The interviewees that
expressed this position were Majikijela Sololo Mthethwa Dyiki Bako and Shibambo
Seemingly under the CRU programme the project would seek to influence and instil this
culture of payment through the rental housing stock focus of the programme That
largely seeks to promote government owned and managed rental housing stock a
departure from the lsquofreersquo housing approach (Bako interview 2015)
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga development
Source Liefa Architects 2015
Phase 1B Phase 2B Phase 3B
Phase 1A Phase 2A
Phase 3A
Page | 76
What was surprising to me was that the family units are not intended to be occupied by
current residents only The idea is that some of the current residents would live elsewhere
and when this question was posed to the official from the GPDHS Majikijelarsquos interview
(2015) response was that the hostel residents who did not qualify in terms of the required
criteria for the renting of the units would be allocated RDPs in the neighbouring area of
Esselen Park but he could not provide clarity as to how and when this would happen
The vision of Sethokga that can be seen from the plan provided below is a reconfigured
locality Rehabilitated single-sex compounds into self contained family units furnished
with child care facilities park(s) garden(s) a community centre recreation facilities and
parking areas
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn
set out to address those needs and challenges
Although the CRU Programme only sets particular administrative operational and
project facilitation guidelines Arguably these guidelines do in some respect address
a number of the ills associated with hostels such as the issue of overcrowding lack of
privacy and poor living conditions (Pienaar 2010) Within Sethokga there are
challenges of tribalism high prevalence of HIV drug abuse alcohol abuse
criminality overcrowding lack of privacy possible health hazards a lack of ablution
facilities The hostel being unsafe for women (especially those who are staying in the
hostel illegally) was identified and shared by the key informants as some of the major
challenges confronting the hostel This view was shared by the ward councillor the
housing officer from the EMM the project manager from the GPDHS the consulting
engineer and the wardrsquos economic representative
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi the issue of tribalism occurred
as a result of what he recalls as a defining political shift ldquoafter the release of Mandela
and when they started preaching lsquothis thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions
happened according to who was Zulu or Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Here the ward councillor explains what he saw as
some of the factors that led to what is currently the strong predominance of Pedi and
Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel suggesting that
ldquoThey were mixed here when they started talking about negotiations that
there must be elections and then the IFP (Inkatha Freedom Party) was
rejecting that and that had nothing to do with membership it was a situation
of the warlords the Zulursquos terrorizing the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa
Page | 77
and standing with the white man The Zulursquos did not like that so that is where
the Zulu and Xhosa divide started and that is when you found that in
Sethokga it became predominantly more Xhosa there was fighting and war
the Zulursquos were chasing people out of their territory at the other hostels The
Xhosarsquos ran to Sethokga There was fighting everywhere even here in
Sethokga and all over the Pedis Vendas Tsongarsquos they all ran away from
those hostels where they were being chased out and they came hererdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
It was unclear as to the extent to which the project dealt with any of these
challenges and how or if they were factored into the project The project seems to
have a general lsquobest practicersquo approach to hostel conversion irrespective of the
circumstance of a particular hostel
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project
ldquoThe political volatility of the project poses an enormous threat to the successful
allocationletting of the family unitsrdquo (Majikijela interview 2015) On the part of the
key informants their continued inability to answer the perhaps not so simple question
of what would happen to those who could not afford the monthly rental of the family
units This suggested that the issue of rentals has remained a grey area even as the
project heads towards project completion ldquoWe will worry about that when we get
thererdquo was the brisk response to my inquiry on this matter Similar to what was
observed by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in the City Deep Redevelopment
project Sethokga faces a similar challenge
Certainly public community participation in any context is a complex and at times a
contentious exercise (Mdunyelwa 2015) I remain hesitant whether the Sethokga
hostel conversion project has been able to lsquotrulyrsquo engage residents and the broader
community in a transparent and reciprocal manner Seemingly affordability will be
the determining factor of who will be able to rent a unit To those who cannot afford
it stands to be seen what remedy will be extended to them
Moreover the following factors were cited as some of the limitations of the project
the lack of transparency political interference an inadequate dissemination of
information to residentscommunity and the projects failure to respond to what the
solution(s) will be for lsquonon-qualifyingrsquo residents who cannot afford the monthly rentals
Page | 78
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful
I wanted to find out from the key informants particularly those who have been
directly involved in the conversion project what for them would constitute a
successful project and how from their point of view the residents and the greater
community would know that the project is completed and has been
successfulunsuccessful Overall the leading response was that a project would be
successful when the family units are occupied Some of the interviewees added that
the process of allocating the units and resolving the myriad of issues are most
certainly likely to cause further delays and will require intricate resolution (ie peoplersquos
unwillingness and otherrsquos inability to pay tension and opposition to paying rentals
opening the letting to tenants who are not hostel residents and so forth)
In summary the thoughts shared by the housing office at the EMM and the wardrsquos
economic representative capture in essence the general position held by every one
of the key informants
ldquoFor me a complete project will be the units functioning on their own and then
people will be told during a public meeting We also need to involve the mayor the
MECs and the media People will be told that it is finished and this is what is going to
happenrdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015) ldquoAfter it has been completed I want to see 80
percent of the people who have been staying in the hostel still residing in the hostel
It must not just be open to whomever There are people as far as Johannesburg who
want to stay here because they see it being comfortable and nice forgetting we are
looking to improve the lives of the current hostel dwellers There are even those in the
township who think that people of the hostel cannot pay so this is not for themrdquo
(Sololo interview 2015)
Page | 79
53 Visual narrative of the family units
531 Architectural designsplans
The design of the family units is what the architect referred to as a multi-storey approach
ldquoThe three storey walk-ups address the need for housing much better than an RDP wouldrdquo
(Bako interview 2015) They have an urban apartment-like feel about them but the
mundane (uniform) paintwork gives them a distinct government provided social housing feel
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development plan
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 80
Figure 12 Architects Section E - E
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 11 Architects Section F ndash F
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 13 South Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 81
Figure 14 North Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 15 East Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 16 West Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 82
532 The project site of family units
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site
View of the site of the family units from one of
the hostel blocks situated adjacent to the
construction site across the street
Construction of the family units
commenced in August of 2011
Site notice placed at the entrance of the
family units construction site
The Sethokga community hall situated at
the entrance to the family units
construction site and adjacent to the
council offices
Page | 83
For the most partthe construction of the
family units is nearing completetion
Walking through the site personally I felt that
the family units had a somewhat prominent
RDP lsquolookrsquo about them
Ground floor view
The entrance into the construction site of the
family units and the site office which is
situtated within the vicinity of the site
Page | 84
533 Inside the Family units
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units
Doorway into one of the three bedroom
family units which leads into an open plan
dining and kitchen area
Each unit has its own dining sitting and
kitchen area
The construction site is lsquopolicedrsquo by the Red
Ants (a private security company)around the
clock and also a private security company
Some of the security members seen on site
they insisted I take a picture of them to
include in this study
Page | 85
Built-in sink and geyser
The family
units offer a number of distinct qualities that
the hostel clearly does not have which
include privacy and a dignified living
environmentspace
Each unit has its bathroom with a built-in
toilet bath and shower
Shower
Separate and additional toilet as part of the
three bedroom family units
The diningsitting area and two adjacent
bedrooms
Page | 86
The site of the family units is being guarded by a private security company and members
of the Red Ants (a private security company) When asked about this the official (the
project manager overseeing the Sethokga hostel conversion project) from the GPDHS
said that this was necessary to ensure that no unauthorised occupations take place This
was also to guard against any possible vandalism or the looting of materialsequipment
or the site office (Majikijela interview 2015)
54 Summary of main themes and findings
This study had a number of themes which resonate with the case study The localised
context of Sethokga hostel offered great insights into the current state of hostels as
spaces and places that still largely exist within a context of volatility poor living conditions
and complex socio-economic challenges (Thurman 1997) The historic exploits on hostels
revealed and I suppose confirmed that the hostel system was established supported and
perpetuated by methodical policy and controls to discourage the permanent settlement
of Africans in urban areas or any intention of relocating their family to urban areas (Segal
1991) Furthermore within the contemporary South African context this has posed a
number of challenges and has been a longstanding reality of a number of hostel dwellers
as observed in the work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010)
The view from one of the family units (a ground
floor three bedroom unit) is onto the ward
councillorrsquos offices and the hostel in the
distance
One of the three bedrooms in the family
units
Page | 87
Sethokga hostel is also one of many hostels that exist within a historically-laden context
The strong prominence of Pedi and Xhosa native speaking men in some respect also
speaks to the events of circular migration that are still a lived-reality of the men of
Sethokga This according to the ward councillor has meant that the men have had to
maintain ties with their families in the Eastern Cape and Limpopo while most of them live
in Sethokga away from their families (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) In terms of gender
issues the aspect of men and housing the hostel conversion project does not adopt a
particular stand on this Seemingly the project makes no effort to appreciate the
apparent rural location of the wives partners children and families of a vast majority of
the men in Sethokga The idea is that anyone who is able to afford the monthly rental of
the family units can sign a lease agreement and rent a unit However this presents a
number of issues and leaves a lot unaccounted for and unanswered ie will the families
of the men in the hostels make a transition to join them in the family units Is this even a
possibility for them what impact would this have on the already stretched social
amenities in the area Arguably in the case of Sethokga this oversight has been a serious
area of contention and has amplified the political volatility of the project
The heavy-handedness of the hostel system cunningly imposed a sense of no escape
yet quite interestingly the later unwillingness to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have their
hostel converted into family units (Thurman 1997)
Among the key findings of the research report is that the lsquorental onlyrsquo tenure option and
approach to the hostel conversion project was the biggest challenge and one of the
most critical points of contention (Pienaar 2010) On the one hand the hostel residents
are arguing that they cannot afford the proposed rentals while on the other hand
officials are of the opinion that this is in fact untrue and not wholly representative of the
attitude(s) of all the hostel residents Thus a supposed unwillingness to pay and a culture
of entitlement was cited by the key informants as the underlying state of affairs and one
that posed the biggest threat to the project and in particular how the family units would
be allocated
Although the project is for the most part about converting Sethokga hostel into family
units in principal it is also about redress integration improving the living conditions of
Sethokga residents reconfiguring the mental and physical landscape of hostels in
contemporary South Africa and introducing children and women into the hostel
Integration was repeatedly cited by the key informants as the main imperative of the
study Political interference and the very particular sensitivities around political allegiance
Page | 88
(keeping in the mind the local elections are fast approaching) are factors that were
cited would cause the greatest difficulty in the allocation of the family units
54 Conclusion
Undoubtedly the Sethokga hostel conversion project has a number of components and
features to it that are complex in part ambiguous and would require further and more
detailed study Seemingly the CRU programme is a lsquodeparturersquo from the Hostel
Redevelopment Programme In part it offers prospects to facilitate the provision of
affordable rental tenure for those earning below R3500 while seeking to promote the
integration of publicsocial housing into the broader housing market Under the
administration of the CRU programme one of the leading aims is to facilitate the creation
of sustainable public housing assets (Pienaar 2010) However the CRU programme has
been criticised as a framework that is largely operating in a policy environment that is
hostile elaborate and not speaking to the needs of the people on the ground
Furthermore many see it as solely a hostel upgrading policy viewed often to be done
impromptu in response to local pressures (Pienaar 2010) To paraphrase Pienaar (2010)
the vagueness regarding the roles and responsibilities of the respective provincial
department of human settlement and municipalities has not provided much confidence
in hostel conversion projects
Chapter five has examined the Sethokga hostel conversion project and attempted to
unpack how the project has been conceptualised This chapter has identified and
outlined the main components of the project its main stakeholders and what has been
their role in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Discussed were the project phases a
number of critical elements such as how the project has understood the needs and
challenges of the hostel residents In addition to this chapter five outlined the way(s) in
which the residents have been involved in the project if the project considered anything
important in terms of gender issues and if what have these been factored into the
project By and large chapter five drew extensively on the findings of the fieldwork and
made an effort to narrate some of the insights and perspectives shared by the key
informants To conclude the chapter a collage of diagrams and images were presented
to offer the reader a visual narrative of the site of the family units
Page | 89
Concluding chapter
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoWhat does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
61 Review and reflections
This research report consisted of six chapters chapter one introduced the study
chapter two provided the theoretical backdrop of the study chapter three
introduced the study area (Sethokga hostel) chapter four discussed the evolution of
hostel redevelopment conversion and what has been the states approach to hostel
conversion and chapter five examined the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project
In chapter one the main point of discussion was the research question outlining the
aim and objectives of the study and the research methodology
Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project been conceptualised
in how the project has been conceptualised does it address the stigma of hostel life
and it what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What informed the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail what is the broad aim and vision
of the project what is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
Page | 90
In chapter one it was also argued that this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects had somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore that there needed to be more inquiry and
study conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel
conversion projects
The studyrsquos theoretical backdrop was discussed in chapter two The aim of this was to
contextualise the term hostels as to clearly illustrate what is meant by it In addition
to drawing on particular strands of literature concepts ideas and arguments that
resonated with the study Chapter two argued that the historically the landscape of
hostels has by and large been complex at times perplexing and highly contentious
Chapter three introduced Sethokga hostel It elaborated on the locality of the hostel
and its local as well as municipal context A visual narrative of the hostel was also
provided and this captured the current state of the hostel and the conditions in which
its residents endure It was established that ironically the conditions in the hostel are
not much different to many of the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg
The hostel was badly designed poorly built and is suffering years of neglect it is in
appalling and overcrowded condition
Chapter four described the evolution of hostel redevelopment conversion in the
country and what has been the states approach to hostel conversion post-1994 This
chapter discussed in some detail the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme Arguing that these programmes have to
date been the lsquoforerunnersrsquo of the statersquos approach to addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo
While in chapter five the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
was examined Chapter five was the crux of this research report The discussions in the
chapters before it set up the groundwork for a critical exploration of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project and for unpacking the research question
Chapter six concludes this study and seeks to answer the question ldquoso what does this
mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo Since this
report was conducted as part of the requirements for the partial fulfilment of an
Urban and Regional Planning honours qualification It is important to address the ldquoso
what for plannersrsquo question and the value that this report stands to offer to the
Page | 91
planning profession Firstly let us reflect on what have been some of the limitations of
the study
62 Limitations of the study
For the most part this study had a wealth of information and sources to draw from
The insights and wisdom provided by the key informants were invaluable their
willingness and enthusiasm to participate in this study was not something I had
anticipated but I remain truly grateful
Due to certain constraints more especially time constraints and the particular scope
focus of the research report this posed some limitations to the study In only
interviewing and engaging with officials and not with the residents of Sethokga the
voices opinions and views of the officials told only one side of a many-sided story
How the project affects and has affected the residents Is this something they want
support and for those who do not what are some of their reasons for contention Is
circular migration still as prominent a feature within the current context of Sethokga
What is the present-day nature of household configurations in the hostels (is the duty
of the older men still to order the actions of the younger men ie the cleaning and up
keeping of the communal area and other household duties) what for the residents
of Sethokga would constitute a successful project
Even as this study concludes the side of the hostel residents remains largely untold
and unreported Furthermore the supposed apathy on the part of the hostel residents
and the views expressed by the key informants that family units offer the most ideal
and best alternative to the residents of Sethokga could not be explored and
interrogated further given the limitations of the scope of the study
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners
Within contemporary South Africa there have certainly been a vast number of
conflicting views held regarding what should be the role and future of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Although academics policy makers bureaucrats developers and
the general public have usually been unable to reach longstanding middle-ground
on what should be done about hostels One of the more widely held views is that
hostels certainly present a real challenge but also an opportunity For government
Page | 92
developers non-government organisations (NGOs) built environment practitioners
and needless to say the residents of hostels themselves (Thurman 1997)
Planners are frequently cast in the role of performing a balancing act (Campbell
2006) As a result the adaptability of the planning profession as a coherent and
impartial discipline has over the years become rather topical subjects (Campbell
2006) This has inevitably continued to require new and innovative ways of lsquoseeingrsquo
lsquocomprehendingrsquo and lsquodoingrsquo things in order to shape and re-shape an inherently
divergent and historic-laden urban landscape (Jupp and Inch 2012) In the midst of
the shifts in the traditional conception and role of the planning profession as a merely
procedural and administrative activity (Harrison and Kahn 2002) planning is still to a
great extent closely tied to government structures (Cornwall 2002) Therefore within
this particular context of government driven intervention urban planning
professionals stand to be instrumental facilitators of development and offer essential
expertise and tools towards addressing some of the challenges within our urban
landscape (Albert and Kramsch 1999)
This study observed a range of intertwined urban dynamics ie around housing socio-
economic distress a wavering political climate and the need to be more
environmentally conscientious This necessitates focused attention and much
consideration as the political economic social and environmental junctures in which
planning has come to operate has meant that the profession has become
susceptible to external pressures scrutiny and influence (Campbell and Marshall
2002)
64 Conclusion
South Africa has for a number of years into democracy been at a critical time of
limited housing supply and a desperate need for housing (Khan and Thurman 2001)
(Pienaar
2010) Planners have an important role to play in facilitating coordinating and
effecting the reconfiguration of the urban landscape towards improving the setting
of inherently socio-economically ailing spaces such as hostels (Jupp and Inch 2012)
Hostels have largely remained as spaces that have continued to perpetuate
underdevelopment inequality and disempowerment (Khan and Thurman 2001) If
family units are to wholly address the stigma of hostel life and the convoluted nature
Page | 93
of hostels to alter the landscape of hostels and define a novel future for hostels and
their residents It is certain that this will require decisive action collaborative efforts
and the wisdom of retrospection
Page | 94
List of references
African National Congress 1994 The Reconstruction and Development Programme A
policy framework ANC Johannesburg
African National Congress (2003) Briefing note 5 Housing
httpwwwancorgzaelections2004briefingshousingpdf
Albert A and Kramsch O (1999) Space Inequality and Difference lsquoRadical Turns
and lsquoCultural Termsrdquo European Planning Studies 7(1) 77 ndash 79
Bandyopadhyay S and Green E (2008) Nation-building and Conflict in Modern
Africa The Suntory Centre
Barnett C (1999) Broadcasting the Rainbow Nation Media Democracy and Nation-
building in South Africa Editorial Board of Antipode 31 (3) 274-303
Benit-Gbaffou C and Mathoho M (2010) A case study of participation in the City
Deep Hostel Redevelopment Project Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Bonner P and Nieftagodien N (2012) Ekurhuleni the making of an urban region
Wits University Press
Campbell H and Marshall R (2002) Values and professional identities in planning
practice in Allmendinger R And Tewdwr-Jones M (eds) Planning futures new
directions for planning theory London Routledge
Castles S and M J (Millerl (2008) The Age of Migration International Population
Movements in the Modern World New York The Guilford Press
Charlton S et al (2014) From Housing to Human Settlement Evolving Perspectives
South African Cities Network
Chipkin I and Meny-Gibert S (2011) Why the Past matters Histories of the Public
Service in South Africa PARI Short Essays number 1 Johannesburg PARI
Collinson M A and K Adazu (2006) The INDEPTH Network A demographic resource
on migration and urbanisation in Africa and Asia Views on Migration in Sub-Saharan
Africa Proceedings of an African Migration Alliance Workshop C Cross D
Gelderblom N Roux and J Mafukidze Cape Town HSRC Press 159- 172
Page | 95
Collinson M A (2006) Health Impacts of Social Transition A study of Female
Temporary Migration and its impact on Child Mortality in Rural South Africa A
dissertation submitted to the School of Public Health University of the Witwatersrand
in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master in Science in the branch of
Medicine
Cornwall A (2002) Making Spaces Changing Places Situating Participation in
Development Institute of Development Studies IDS Working Paper 170
Creswell J W (2009) Research Design Qualitative Quantitative and Mixed Methods
Approaches 3rd Edition Los Angeles Sage Publications Inc
Demacon 2014 Sethokga hostels mixed typology market analysis market research
Findings and recommendations
Department of Human Settlements Republic of South Africa Programmes and
Subsidies document assessed on 7 July 2015 from
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentspublicationshuman_settlement
s_programmes_and_subsidiespdf
Department of Social Development Republic of South Africa White Paper on
Families in South Africa 2012
Dyiki M (2006) City of Cape Town Integrating Families Hostels to Homes
Redevelopment Programme Presentation
httpswwwwesterncapegovzatext200652006_hostels_presentation-_dyikipdf
Fritz V and Menocal A R (2007) Understanding State-Building from a Political
Economy Perspective An Analytical and Conceptual Paper on Processes
Embedded Tensions and Lessons for International Engagement Report for DFIDrsquos
Effective and Fragile States Teams Overseas Development Institute
Greenberg S and Mathoho M (2010) ldquoConceptual Framework on Public
Participation and Developmentrdquo Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Page | 96
Grieger L et al (2013) Moving Out and Moving In Evidence of Short-Term Household
Change in South Africa from the National Income Dynamics Study
Goldblatt B amp Meintjes S (1996) Gender and the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission a submission to the TRC May
Harrison P And Kahn M (2002) The ambiguities of change the case of the planning
profession in the province of KwaZulu-Natal South Africa in Thornley A and Rydin Y
(eds) Planning in the global era Aldershot Ashgate
Jupp E and Inch A (2012) Planning as a profession in uncertain times Town Planning
Review Vol 83 No 5
Khan F and Thurman S (2001) Setting the Stage Current Housing Policy and
Debate in South Africa Isandla Institute
Liefa Consulting (2015) Maps diagrams source
LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor
report
Mapetla M M (2005) Aspects of urban housing for women and men in Southern
Africa Roma Lesotho National University of Lesotho
Marshall M N (1996) Sampling for qualitative research Family Practice Oxford
University Press
Mosoetsa S (2011) Eating from one pot the dynamics of survival in poor South
African households Johannesburg Wits University Press
Mdunyelwa M L (2015) Public Participation in Hostel Redevelopment Programs in
Nyanga and Langa Dissertation presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in
the Faculty of Arts and Social Science at Stellenbosch University
National Housing Report (2009) -
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentsnational_housing_20092_Techn
ical_General_Guidelines
Netshitenzhe J (2011) A Developmental State South Africarsquos developmental
Capacity UCT Summer School Mapungubwe Institute for Strategic Reflection
Page | 97
Peoples Housing Programme httpwwwjoburg-
archivecozacity_visionannualreport2002-03chapter10pdf
Pienaar J S and Cloete C E (2005) Hostel Conversion as Social Housing in South
Africa Funding Regime VS Real Needs Case Study of the Sethokga Hostel Conversion
Project Pacific Rim Real Estate Society (PRRES)
Pienaar J (2010) Community Residential Units key elements application implications
for Metros Municipal Leadership Housing Forum0
Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the Community Residential Units
Programme 2006
httpwwwgovzaabout-governmentgovernment-programmescommunity-
residential-unit-cru-programme
Ramphele M (1993) A Bed Called Home Life in the Migrant Labour Hostels of Cape
Town Ohio Ohio University Press
Segal L (1991) The Human Face of Violence Hostel dwellers speak In The Journal of
Southern African Studies Vol 18 No 1
SJN Development Planning Consultants (2000) Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial
Development Framework
South African Department of Housing 2008 Community Residential Programme
httpwwwhousinggovzaContentCRUHomehtm
South African Local Government Association
httpwwwsalgaorgzaappwebrootassetsfilesGuidelines20for20Municipalities
Flyer20rental20housing20NMApdf
South African Yearbook 20122013
httpwwwsouthafricanewyorknetconsulateYearbook2020131320Human20S
ettlemp
Statistics South Africa Census (2001) Concepts and Definitions Report
httpswwwStatistics+South+Africa+Census+(2001)+Concepts+and+Definitions+Repo
rt+03-02-26+Version
Thurman S (1997) Umzamo improving hostel dwellersrsquo accommodation in South
Africa Environment and Urbanisation Vol 9 No 2
Page | 98
Urban Sector Network Final Report August 2000 ndash April 2003 Hostel Redevelopment
httppdfusaidgovpdf_docsPdaby792pdf
Van der Berg S (2010) Current poverty and income distribution in the context of
South African history Stellenbosch Economic Working Papers 2210
Von Holdt K (2010) Nationalism Bureaucracy and Developmental State The South
African Case South African Review of Sociology Volume 41 Number 1
Watt A (2012) Essentials of project management
httpopentextbccaprojectmanagement
Ziehl S C (2001) Documenting Changing Family Patterns in South Africa Are Census
Data of any Value African Sociological Review 5(2)
Interviews with key informants
Shibambo Vincent Resident Engineer LTE Consulting Interview 14thAugust 2015
(Sethokga family units project site)
Mthethwa Jabu Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Housing Officer Interview 17
August 2015 (Ekurhuleni Kempton Park Housing Offices)
Mohlapamaswi Ward Councillor ANC Tembisa Ward 4 Interview 18 August 2015
(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers
Sololo Lufefe Ward 4 Economic Development Representative Interview 18 August
2015(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers)
Majikijela Sisa Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlements Sethokga
Hostel Conversion Project Manager Interview 19 August 2015 (Sethokga family units
project site boardroom)
Dyiki Malibongwe Housing Development Agency Official 7 September 2015
(Housing Development Agency head office Killarney Johannesburg)
Bako Simba Liefa Architects Interview 9 September (LTE House Sunninghill
Johannesburg)
Page | 5
To think too long about doing a
thing often becomes its undoing ndash
Eva young
Page | 6
This study emanates as a result of two main contributing factors the first being
somewhat retrospective and the second being of academic interest and
inquisitiveness Both will hopefully contribute to a study that will make a meaningful
contribution to broader scholarly literature and learning
I grew up living fairly close to a hostel I had walked past this particular hostel
(Sethokga) on numerous occasions in fact more times than I can recall but I had
never set foot in a hostel until quite recently It was not because I was told not to go
into the hostel or cautioned not to mingle with those residing in the hostel but there
was always this strange feeling of unease and uncertainty that presented itself in the
lofty dim grungy facade of this place There was in myself however I curiousness
about the hostel not just because of how it looked that is the extensive and obvious
outward appearance of wear and tear but the ingenuous wondering of how this
place functioned Who lived there how did they live there and so I rather naively
wondered why anyone would chose to live lsquoin that placersquo What was also always
curious was how the hostel seemed to be remote from the township which
surrounded it
Some ten years later after many years that this hostel had been out of sight and for
the most part out of mind I was in the neighbourhood and noticed these more
appealing apartment-like structures that appeared to be replacing the old structures
and with a great deal of inquisitiveness and some courage I set to inquire on this The
abstract below confers some of my own sentiments that of the few published studies
on hostels most of the focus has been on hostels in Johannesburg and Cape Town
(Dyiki interview 2015) Hence the fact that the case study for this study was situated
in an area that is quite literally and somewhat figuratively lsquoclose to homersquo provided
personal eagerness and allure about this study and an opportunity to confront this
oversight
ldquo by an accident of research the hostels in Cape Town have been under a far
more intense sociological gaze than those on the East Rand Given the sudden
prominence of the inner city hostels in the Transvaal war we have been forced to
recognise and attempt to overcome this oversight of the few published studies
on the hostels in the Transvaal most focus on Johannesburg and are essentially
descriptiverdquo (Segal 19915)
Page | 7
While I have always been curious about where and how people live and their
experiences and reality in the places they reside hostels have always intrigued me
This particular focus on hostels also emanates as a result of a particular frustration
within my standing as a scholar with what has continually appeared to me that is to
be this sort of overstretched overemphasis and preoccupation by our post-1994
government with shanty towns This is not to say that I think shanty towns are not a
significant area of concern characterised by some of the worst living conditions and
rightfully so deserve concerted attention and decisive remedial measures According
to Segal (1991) much like hostel dwellers the residents of shantyrsquos form part of the
South African populace who have been amongst the most severely exploited and
disadvantaged (Segal 1991)
In focusing on hostels as a euphemism for single-sex labour compounds one is
confronted with a similarly momentous and multifaceted circumstance As hostels
were and largely still continue to be very much part of the housing crisis in the country
and so this research report will endeavour to cast some light on hostels to
contextualise hostels the hostel conversion approach and the associated stigma of
hostel live within a contemporary South African context
Page | 8
Chapter one Introductory chapter15
1 Introduction15
11 Background to the study17
12 Rationale18
13 Problem statement18
14 Research question and sub-questions19
15 Significance of the study19
16 Aim and objectives of the research20
17 Research methodology20
171 Type of research20
172 What kind of information is needed22
173 Collecting data22
174 Sampling22
175 Ethical considerations23
18 Conclusion24
Chapter two Theoretical backdrop25
2 Introduction25
21 Contextualising hostels26
22 Key concepts theories ideas and arguments27
221 The historic model of hostels the conceptualisation of the hostel system28
222 Migration and the notion of migrant labour labourers as conceived under the
hostel system29
223 The notion of bedhold31
Page | 9
224 The stigma of hostel life31
225 Family versus household configurations32
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing33
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy35
228The role and significance of communitypublic participation in hostel conversion
projects35
23 Conclusion38
Chapter three Introducing Sethokga hostel39
3 Introduction39
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)39
311 Geographic description of the study area41
312 Locality44
313 Local and municipal context45
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel50
321 Built formArchitecture50
322 Municipal services54
323 The adjoining area55
33 Conclusion56
Chapter four The states approach to hostel conversion58
4 Introduction58
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach58
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach59
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme59
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process60
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing61
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised
Housing61
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country62
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme63
44 The Community Residential Units Programme65
45 Conclusion67
Chapter five The Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project68
5 Introduction68
Page | 10
51 Outline of the main components of the project68
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project68
512 Project phases69
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project70
521 Broad vision and aim of the project74
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and
in turn set to address those needs and challenges76
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project77
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful78
53 Visual narrative of the site of the family units79
531Architectural designsplans79
532 The project site of the family units82
533 Inside the family units84
53 Summary of main themes and findings86
54 Conclusion88
Chapter six Concluding chapter89
61 Review and reflections89
62 Limitations of the study91
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners91
64 Conclusion92
List of references94
Page | 11
Pages
Maps
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni
hostel and Vusimuzi hostel40
Map 2 Locality map44
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex45
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework48
Figures
Figure 1 Ground floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 2 First floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 3 Elevation of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 4 Collage of exterior imagery of the hostel50
Figure 5 Collage of interior imagery of the hostel52
Figure 6 Municipal amenities54
Figure 7 The adjoining area55
Figure 8 Community meeting agenda74
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga developmenthelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip76
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development planhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip79
Figure 11 Architects Section F-Fhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figue 12 Architects Section E-Ehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figure 13 South Elevation80
Figure 14 North Elevatonhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip81
Figure 15 East Elevation81
Figure 16 West Elevation81
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site82
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units84
Table
Table 1 Total workforce in the period December 2013 - January 2014 Sethokga
sitehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip72
Page | 12
ANC African National Congress
Cllr Councillor
CRU Community Residential Units
DoHS Department of Human Settlements
EMM Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
GPDHS Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement
HRP Hostel Redevelopment Programme
IDP Integrated Development Plan
IFP Inkatha Freedom Party
MSDF Metropolitan Spatial Development Framework
PWV Pretoria ndash Witwatersrand ndash Vereeniging
RDP Reconstruction and Development Programme
SDF Spatial Development Framework
USAID United States Agency for International Development
USN Urban Sector Network
Page | 13
Chapter one will essentially introduce the research report The aim of this chapter is as
follows highlight the objective of the study provide a background to the study and
also discuss the rationale and problem statement In addition to detailing the
research question the significance of this study and the research methodology will
also be reviewed
Coincidently this research report is written and takes place at a time where there has
been somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms With the prevailing question being ldquoWhat iscontinues to be the
role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo Although this study will not in effect
actively seek to answer that particular question it presents a valuable premise for this
study ldquoFamily units to address the stigma of hostel liferdquo
The main aim of this chapter is to contextualise hostel to position the study within an
expanded theoretical framework The main chapter will in part argue that hostels
have largely remained as urban enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric and
that the rigid structures of regulation and control which were imposed on hostel
dwellers have perpetuated a complex state of affairs The literature review section
which details some of the key concepts theories ideas and arguments on the topic
will elaborate further on this
This chapter aims to provide a comprehensive description of the study area and so it
is in this chapter that the local as well as municipal context of the study area will
altogether be considered The aim of this chapter is to provide the reader with a sort
of lsquofeelrsquo of Sethokga hostel and its present-day circumstance It will attempt to
articulate to the reader the authors own experience and account of the study area
Page | 14
in an effort to provide the reader with a well-versed narrative of the multifaceted
nature of the hostel and the complex reality in which its residents endure
The South African statersquos approach to hostel redevelopment conversion is
discussed It is argued that the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of hostel
redevelopment conversion Chapter four discusses a number of state policy and
approaches addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo Ahead of this however the evolution of the
hostel redevelopment conversion approach is examined which dates back to the
earliest (soon after 1994) efforts by the South African government to remedy the ills of
the hostel system
Chapter five examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seeks to unpack
the conceptualisation of the project This chapter reflects and draws extensively on
the findings of the field work and the invaluable insights offered by the key informants
The main components of the hostel conversion project are examined and the vision
of Sethokga personified by the hostel conversion project is presented in chapter five
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoSo what does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
Page | 15
Introductory chapter
In the wake of the political transition in South Africa in 1994 and for some time
preceding this time frame violence squalor overcrowding and socio-political strife
had long become characteristic of some of the features associated with hostels and
the stigma of hostel life (Thurman 1997) Due to its history as systematically
disempowered yet politically vocal enclaves we have come to know or perhaps be
familiar with hostels as highly contentious and antagonistic environments with a
burdened local identity (Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The stigma of hostel life constitutes among a host of conditions an innate reality
where the residents of hostels inhibit isolated destitute and unbecoming spaces
(Segal 1991) Built as single-sex labour compounds to accommodate African migrant
labourers for the duration of their stay in South Africarsquos white urban areas hostels
occupy a unique position within the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape
(Thurman 1997) As sojourners in South Africarsquos white urban areas the law
constructed a lsquolegalrsquo person called a labourer who was lsquoauthorisedrsquo to temporarily
reside in the urban space but had to retreat to their rural quarters once their lsquoservicersquo
had been concluded (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Thus to draw attention to the
unkindness of their living conditions many hostel dwellers have continued for the
better part of South Africarsquos democracy to lsquochoosersquo physical violence as a tool
perceived to best serve and afford some attention to their troubles (Pienaar and
Crofton 2005)
Within the context of this research report the term hostels widely refer to single-sex
dormitory style labour compounds which emerged in South Africa under the
apartheid system and ideology of separate development (Pienaar and Crofton
2005) The ideology of separate development and the resultant influx control policies
were a distinctive trait of the government of a particular juncture in the countryrsquos
history - a government that as part of its mandate held to discourage the permanent
settlement of the African populace in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) This further
translated itself in the governmentrsquos refusal to plan and consent to any sort of
lsquomeaningfulrsquo investment into areas designated for the other who were primarily
located in the townships on the periphery of the urban terrain (Ramphele 1993)
Page | 16
Badly designed poorly built and suffering many years of neglect hostels were
primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for the comfort of hostel
dwellers (Thurman 1997) Conceivably the hostel system socialised its inhabitants into
an undignified and callous condition which has in some respect persisted and has
unfortunately not wholly been reconciled (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In hostels that
were male occupied hostel dwellers were regarded as lsquomen of four worldsrsquo which
referred to their present and existing life within the hostel the surrounding township(s)
places of work and their rural homes (Segal 1991) The hostel system made it
impossible for hostel dwellers to live in the hostel with their families ie wives
husbands partners children (Segal 1991) This consequence is particularly important
to note at this early stage in the report because of the wisdom and context it adds as
the study progresses
Coincidently this research is written and takes place at a time where there has been
somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms Undoubtedly the prevailing question has been ldquoWhat is should be
the role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo The current Minister of Human
Settlements has said that ldquohostels no longer have a place within South Africarsquos
democratically reconfigured state and so the state needs to get rid of hostelsrdquo (Sisulu
2015) However in a nation such as South Africa efforts towards transition are
ambiguous complex and can often be marked by violence (Mosoetsa 2011)
According to Thurman (1997) of an estimated 604 000 hostel beds around the country
in the late 1990s accommodated whole families relatively close to urban centres
Furthermore Thurman argues that hostels present both a significant challenge and an
opportunity for government NGOs developers and hostel dwellers themselves High
density housing stock stood to gain a considerably large supply of low income
(Thurman 1997) Even while a large number of hostel redevelopmentconversion
projects continue to be riddled with tension and difficulty the prospect(s) for change
and reform that they offer cannot simply be dismissed
This study seeks to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel conversion project to
develop an informed understanding of the defining features and characteristics of
this particular hostel conversion project It examines what is and what has been the
nature of engagement and dialogue between the various stakeholders involved and
discusses the insights they were able to offer to this study In 2015 21 years into South
Page | 17
Africarsquos democracy we have to wonder what is needed to make amends and offset
the dishonour of hostel life
11 Background to the study
We have to understand what the hostel system did was to lsquoaccommodatersquo the
African populace in single-sex labour compounds (Segal 1991) Upon their arrival
their presence in urban areas was constrained as they were met with strict rules and
restrictions (Ramphele 1993) In turn social relations were severally volatile and
ambiguous under the hostel system as hostel dwellers were constrained in their ability
to interact in certain or in their own chosen ways (Thurman 1997) There have been a
number of authors who have noted that the notion of family was partly if not entirely
redefined under this system (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were designed with little or no
thought given of human comfort security and interaction and many are still in
appalling neglected and overcrowded conditions (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) For
many people hostels represent a bitter and hopeless reminder of the past while for
others they are a well prized and affordable shelter in an environment of serve
homelessness (Thurman 1997)
Accordingly soon after 1994 South Africarsquos democratic government made some
attempt to convert hostels into environments suitable for family life although the
extent of this has not entirely been clear (DoHS 2015) This was met with hostility
violence and unwillingness by some hostel dwellers particularly those in the Pretoria
Witwatersrand and Vereeniging (PWV) region to have their hostels
convertedredeveloped into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010) The
violence that had become synonymous with hostel life became an overwhelming
impediment that proved difficult to overcome (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that the idea of an unambiguous constant and unrestricted
presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a point of contention for
some of the men who had far too long become accustomed to living lsquoalonersquo as
men Some expressed unwillingness while others found it a struggle to comprehend or
endorse this change that seemed far too unfamiliar and a challenge to come to
grips with (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Thus in hostels where hostel conversion projects have since taken-off the general
attitudes perceptions and reception of the projects have in some respects continued
to be negative and unwelcomed Scepticism tension and hostility add to the already
complex nature of the hostel conversion projects (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
Page | 18
2010) Hostels are still largely spaces confronted with deep social injustices (ie poor
living conditions a lack of privacy overcrowded) and are an insult to the dignity of
their occupants in several ways as both spatially limited and socio-economically
limiting spaces (Ramphele 1993) The limits imposed by hostels onto hostel dwellers
have persisted in protracting unkindness and a distorted conception of the
fundamental purpose of housing Hostels remain as an unfortunate symbol of a
former governmentrsquos refusal and failure to acknowledge the personhood (the
position and quality of being an individual or having feelings perspectives integrity
and human characteristics needs and wants) of the men and women they housed
(Ramphele 1993)
12 Rationale
Arguably hostel conversion projects and particularly the conceptualisation of these
projects is still a relatively under-researched field Based on my efforts to find
published work on the subject and even though there have been a number of
hostels across the country which have undergone or are undergoing hostel
conversion this remains a rather neglected study field
Hostels within their historic make-up were for the most part premised on fairly uniform
ideals arrangements and gender configurations The demographic setting within
some hostels across the country have since become a lot more fluid and departed
from their former mandatory construct (as strictly single-sex spaces) In what were
predominantly male occupied hostels women and children have since moved into
some of those hostels
Sethokga hostel which will serve as the case study for this research is a hostel that is
still predominantly male occupied but is undergoing hostel conversion to convert the
hostel into family units I believe that the fact that the hostel is still predominantly
male occupied presents an intriguing dimension to this study on hostel conversion
and efforts to grapple with the research question
13 Problem statement
In the case of Sethokga hostel a hostel conversion project is underway but it is not
clear what has sparked such a conversion and to what extent it is driven by the
available policies or assessments of needs or what attempt has been made to meet
these needs Subsequently what would the conversion of a predominantly male
Page | 19
dominated hostel rife with historically inherent conditions necessitate Therefore
how has the conversion project grasped the experience of men within such a hostel
and how has it grasped the concept of family life
14 Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units been conceptualised and
based upon the conceptualised ideas does it address the stigma of hostel life and it
what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What led to the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail What is the broad aim and vision
of the project What is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
15 The significance of the study - positioning the study relative to existing academic
literature
The significance of this research report lies in what I believe is a gap in the scope of
work covered over the years on hostels particularly on hostel conversion projects
Based on my efforts to find published work on the subject questions around what
these projects entail their implications relevance and impact remain unanswered
In the work I have managed to access so far this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects has somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore there needs to be more inquiry and study
conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel conversion
projects
As documented by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) there are vast and intricate
layers of engagement communication participation and even discontentment
Page | 20
involved in hostel conversion projects For instance the legitimacy around where
decision-making lies and which avenues are or should be available to voice
concerns have been some of the challenges relating to hostel conversion and have
added to the already complex nature of these projects
There is most certainly room for a study to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel
conversion project and probe this idea that family units could serve as an adequate
tool for the apt reform of hostels as many of us have come to know them associate
with them or even disassociate from them
16 Aim and objectives of the research
The main aim of this research report is to examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project and how the project has been conceptualised
Objectives
To examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
To develop a more comprehensive understanding of the hostel conversion
approach relative to the socio-economic and political context of the hostel
To explore the possibility and potential of family units as a viable tool to
addressing the stigma of hostel life
To examine how the project has understood the needs and challenges of the
residents and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
To examine the specific spatial focus of the project
17 Research methodology
171 Type of research
The methodology used in the study is a qualitative approach to research and semi-
structured interviews were conducted as the primary means of data collection
Additionally the data collection process involved the use of a variety of sources
which ranged from books journal articles newspaper articles and online media
platforms in the form of articles and radio podcasts
Page | 21
According to Cresswell (2009) this particular method to research (a qualitative
method) entails among other things the use of horizontal dialogue conversation and
the exchange of ideas between the interviewer and the interviewees (Cresswell
2009) Key informants were identified on the basis of their knowledge of andor
involvement in the Sethokga hostel conversion project and the following individuals
were interviewed
1st interviewee Mr Vincent Shibambo resident engineer with LTE consulting (the
company facilitating the construction and administration of the project) Interview
conducted 14th August 2015 at the project site The interview took place in the
boardroom of the project site offices
2nd interviewee Mr Jabu Mthethwa housing officer from the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality Interview conducted 17th August 2015 the interview took place in Mr
Mthethwarsquos office at the council offices in the Kempton Park CBD area
3rd interviewee ANC Ward 4 Tembisa Ward Councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi Interview
conducted 18th August 2015 in the ward councillorrsquos office at the ward councillors
chambers situated adjacent to the project site offices within the vicinity of the hostel
4th interviewee Mr Lufefe Sololo Ward 4 Tembisa Economic Development Rep (Mr
Sololo sits on the ward committee that advises the ward councillor) Interview
conducted 18th of August 2015 at Sethokga hostel
5th interviewee Mr Sisa Majikijela official from the Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlements Mr Majikijela is the current project manager of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project Interview conducted 19th of August 2015 in the boardroom
of the project site offices
6th interviewee Mr Malibongwe Dyiki who was a resident of a hostel in Cape Town in
the early 1980s He then became a community representative in later years and then
moved on to be a government official facilitating hostel redevelopments in the
Western Cape He has written and published on hostels and has also participated in
policy discussions on the Hostel Redevelopment Programme Interview was done on
the 7th of September 2015 at the Housing Development Agencyrsquos head office in
Killarney Johannesburg where he is currently working as the Programme Manager for
the mining towns programme
7th interviewee Simba Bako architect with Liefa Architects (appointed by LTE
consulting Liefa Architects were responsible for the design of the family units)
Page | 22
Interview conducted on the 9th of September 2015 at LTE House in Sunninghill
Johannesburg
172 What kind of information is needed
The kind of information that was needed was information which contextualised the
study area within its broader local and municipal context Pre-existing data
particularly demographic and statistical data on the hostel and its surroundings
Ekurhulenirsquos Integrated Development Plan the Metrorsquos Spatial Development
Framework and information that would give an overview of the geographic social
economic and possibly even the political context of the study area is needed
Moreover project reports studies memorandums or minutes and state policy on
hostel conversion would also be useful
173 Collecting data
In collecting data there were a number of methods and tools that were used which
involved moments of ad hoc discussion and deliberation around the topic What was
invigorating and always thrilling was peoplersquos interest and curiosity regarding this
study The impromptu encounter(s) with people who were open and ready to share
their point of views and experience(s) honestly made the data collection process
that much easier
There was a considerable amount of time spent on examining literature books
articles (both academic and media sources) sources on the internet and journals
Collecting data also involved examining similar programmes and projects on hostel
conversionredevelopment so collecting desktop data and consulting library sources
was an invaluable part of collecting data
174 Sampling
The study sample is important for any research The choice between qualitative
quantitative or even the consideration of using a mixed methods approach should
be determined by the research question and not decided subjectively In grappling
with the research question it seemed most appropriate for the purpose of this study to
make use of a qualitative approach It was believed that a qualitative approach
Page | 23
would provide the necessary framework to respond to the research question and
address the aim and objectives of the study In answering the lsquohowrsquo and lsquowhyrsquo
questions that the study would pose a qualitative approach would engage in a sort
of comprehensive exploration of the many-sided and possibly complex dynamics of
the Sethokga hostel conversion project For this reason a qualitative interview-
centred approach was used (Marshall 1996)
Marshall (1996) argues that there are three broad methods commonly used in
selecting a study sample that is convenience judgement and theoretical sampling
techniques Convenience sampling involves the most accessible person(s) it is the
least time consuming requires the least effort and financing Judgement sampling
also referred to as purposeful sampling is according to Marshall (1996) the most
widely used sampling technique With judgement sampling the researcher
purposefully and actively selects a sample that would best respond to their research
question and in principle convenience is set aside While theoretical sampling
involves a process of selection of a sample that is mainly driven by and rooted in a
theoretical position the sample is selected to examine or elaborate a particular
theory (Marshall 1996)
For the purpose of this study the judgemental sampling technique was used and this
entailed the active and purposeful selection of what Marshall refers to as lsquosubjectsrsquo
with particular expertise ie key informants The sample selection was based on my
prior experience and practical knowledge of the study area The limitation however
was that there were quite a number of elaborate and contentious issues at play
which within the limits of this study could not be explored at length on account of
time constraints and the particular focus of this study
175 Ethical considerations
As a young female scholar entering into a rather conflicted lsquotoughrsquo and culturally-
laden environment I was faced with what was an apparent concern for safety and
so on my trips to the hostel I was always accompanied by my father or a friend
Initially my intention was to interview some of the hostel residents but the sensitivities
around the harshness of their living conditions were highlighted as a possible area of
vulnerability and the spate of xenophobia attacks particularly in and around hostels
suggested reconsideration As a researcher I ensured that the participants were all
Page | 24
well aware and informed that their participation was voluntary and they were at
liberty to withdraw their involvement at any stage The interviewees were informed of
the choice to remain anonymous if they wished and that the information they shared
would be used to develop this research report Thus my ethical obligation as a
researcher was to ensure that I did minimal harm and unintentional damage through
my research that I conducted myself responsibly and professionally at all times and
that I reported accurately what I found including unforeseen and even negative
findings
18 Conclusion
Hostels consolidated the migrant labour system They served not only to control the
number of black labour residing in urban areas but also to manage its behaviour As
hostels were designed to be unattractive and uncomfortable many comparisons
have been made between hostels and institutions such as army barracks and prisons
There is a window of opportunity in promoting hostel conversion but injecting
resources into previously marginalised communities have resulted and is resulting in
conflict local power struggles and competition for those resources (Thurman 1997)
The next chapter will discuss the theoretical backdrop of this study and elaborate on
key concepts theories ideas and arguments that have been of particular relevance
to unpacking the research question
Page | 25
Theoretical backdrop
2 Introduction
It is imperative at this point to contextualise the term hostels so as to clearly il lustrate
what is meant by it This section of the report will contextualise the term hostels and it
will examine key concepts theories ideas and arguments that are of particular
relevance to the study
Furthermore chapter two argues that hostels have largely remained as urban
enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
It argues that the rigid structures of regulation and control that were imposed upon
the former inhabitants of hostels were essentially just one part of a multi-faceted and
disconcerting circumstance that has continued to live on within a large number of
hostels (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012) This view that hostels operated and in some
respect continue to operate under a complex set of circumstances is shared and
supported by the work of authors such as Segal (1991) Ramphele (1993) Goldblatt
and Meintjes(1996) Thurman (1997) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) Dyiki (2006) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) Subsequently some of their work will be used to
unpack the research question and draw on certain aspects that resonate with the
case study The following abridged abstract describes some of the complexities
around hostels and the views captured in the work of some of the authors mentioned
above
According to Segal (1991) hostel life and the regulations imposed upon hostel
dwellers made it extremely difficult to maintain family life that is men would leave
their families in the rural areas for long periods of time to find work in the city
Ramphele (1993) notes that the families of the men would then became reliant for
their survival upon the remittance of the men Mapetla (2005) makes a compelling
argument that suggests that within contemporary society men are traditionally
culturally and even spiritually still regarded as the head the protector and provider of
their families even as the lines delineating the roles of men and women within
contemporary society have become faint and more fluid Arguably hostels still exist
within a highly complex setting (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Page | 26
21 Contextualising hostels
Generally hostels were badly designed poorly built and many have been suffering
years of neglect (Thurman 1997) Hostels were primarily built to accommodate
African migrant workers for the containment of their labour over the duration of their
stay in what were demarcated as South Africarsquos white urban areas (Thurman 1997)
There are notably three types of hostels namely public sector private sector and
grey sector hostels (Ramphele 1993)
Public sector hostels are hostels that were built and managed by provincial or local
authorities and mainly accommodated workers across a range of sectors (Ramphele
1993) Private sector hostels were built by private sector enterprise to house private
sector labourers who would mainly be working in the factories and mines (Pienaar
and Crofton 2005) Grey sector hostels were built on public sector-owned land by the
private sector under some form of contractual agreement with a government
authority (provincial or local) but were largely managed and controlled by private
sector employers (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Public and grey sector hostels were
generally situated in the townships (Thurman 1997) However when they were
planned these hostels were generally located on the outskirts of the cities but with
increased urban growth they now relatively tend to be more centrally situated
(Thurman 1997)
Ramphele (1993) argued that each hostel had a distinct form and quality about it
Elements of tribalism certain customs systems of belief and association dimensions of
conflict and conflict resolution were not homogeneous across all hostels (Ramphele
1993) The type of work that the migrant labourers did across the sectors they worked
was often rudimentary It ranged from unskilled to very basic semi-skilled work and it
was quite labour intensive in return for meagre earnings (Ramphele 1993)
Historically hostels were characterised by two main geographic classifications firstly
hostels in the backdrop of an urban context (ie also referring to inner city hostels)
and secondly hostels in the areas around mines (Segal 1991) According to Segal
(1991) urban context hostels had a more diffused grouping of hostel dwellers than
their mining counterparts (Segal 1991) Hostels in urban context developed broader
and somewhat complex relations with the outside community This contrasted with
the extreme isolation of hostel dwellers in hostels around the mines Therefore hostels
in the urban context were to a lesser extent conceived to be lsquomore openrsquo and lsquoless
strictly controlledrsquo However both were essentially sites of control and exploitation
Page | 27
with clearly marked physical boundaries in form of high walls and fences with single
and restricted entry and exit points (Segal 1991)
Hostels in urban areas had government bureaucracies responsible for their
management and maintenance as opposed to a single employercompany (Segal
1991) Moreover hostels in the urban context accommodated a wider and more
diverse range of workers who did not necessarily work for the same
employercompany or have uniform working hours or shifts In urban hostels ethnicity
was not the official organiser of hostel dwellers as men from different backgrounds
and homelands would and could share rooms (Ramphele 1993) Lastly and perhaps
the most important distinguishing feature of the two was the fact that hostels in urban
areas were not under the extensive force of lsquototal controlrsquo as was the experience of
mining hostel dwellers (Segal 1991 Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
According to Pienaar and Crofton (2005) public sector hostels accommodated the
largest number of hostel dwellers Overall the quality of living environment of hostels
was generally poor but this was particularly bad in public sector hostels (Ramphele
1993) Additionally the administrative processes and management of public sector
hostels was under dire strain as no clear records of those that lived in the hostels or
those entering and exiting the hostel were kept (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that although private sector hostels were considered to be
better managed and maintained The general state of all hostels whether public or
privately owned was largely characterised by poor living conditions a lack of
privacy the sharing of very limited spaces a distressed local context and
overcrowded conditions (Ramphele 1993) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) further note
that around the early 1980s hostel residents simply started to withdraw from payment
of rentals and thus the maintenance of the hostels grew even thinner and steadily
non-existent Public sector hostels grew especially financially and politically
unmanageable (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
22 Key concepts theories ideas and arguments
To unpack the research question and contextualise the study within a broader
theoretical framework this section of the report will discuss and draw on a number of
concepts theories ideas and arguments
Page | 28
221 The historic model of hostels the conceptualisation of the hostel system
In grappling with the historic model of the hostel system this section of the report will
discuss two main themes The conceptualisation of the hostel system and migration
migrant labour as conceived under the hostel system It illustrates the effect hostels
have had on shaping the lives and experiences of their inhabitants in unique and
complex ways (Thurman 1997)
South Africa is a country marked by a legacy of systematic discrimination and the
deliberate disempowerment of a lsquocategoryrsquo of its population (Thurman 1997) Hostels
were established supported and perpetuated by methodical policy frameworks and
brute controls to discourage the permanent settlement of the in historically lsquowhite
areasrsquo (Segal 1991) Thurman (1997) argues that hostels occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are symbolic of three centuries of
systematic racial discrimination
Seemingly ignited by and originating in the mining industry in the nineteenth century
the construction of hostels reached a peak during the 1960s and 1970s in the period
that has been referred to as the ldquogrand apartheidrdquo years (Thurman 1997) They were
built as single-sex dormitory compounds to accommodate African migrant labourers
as sojourners in what were delineated as white urban areas (Ramphele 1993) In
hostels which were intended strictly for male migrant labourersrsquo job-seeking by
African women was criminalised and a deliberate policy not to provide family
housing was pursued (Ramphele 1993)
Common to hostels was the blurring and hostility of the boundaries between the
hostel dwellers place(s) of work and their living spaces (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) In
turn some authors have argued that hostels in some sense functioned as a lsquototal
institutionrsquo According to Segal (1991) and Ramphele (1993) geographically many
hostels were isolated and situated literally at the edges of urban areas and society in
general They were primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for
human comfort safety or enrichment (Thurman 1997) The heavy-handedness of the
hostel system imposed a cunning inferiority complex a sense of no escape yet quite
interestingly a later unwillingness and indifference to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have
their hostel converted into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Ramphele (1993) and Segal (1991) make a rather compelling argument and share
the view that the behaviour and conduct of some of the hostel dwellers against
Page | 29
having their hostel converted into family units is indicative of similar behaviour and
actions displayed by long-term prisoners and people contained in barracks They
argue that a substantial number of long-term inmates would in some instances
display great unwillingness and some difficulty to the prospect of re-entering society
after being socialised into a total institution a reformatory (Ramphele 1993 and
Segal 1991) According to a text by Statistics South Africa (2001) an institution can be
defined as a communal place of residence for persons with common characteristics
(Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001) One could then argue
that one of the common characteristics shared by many hostels was the migrant
labourer status attributed to them (Dyiki 2006)
222 Migration and the notion of migrant labour labourers as conceived under the hostel
system
Castles and Miller (2008) argues that all through time and space individuals and
families have been migrating and doing so for a number of reasons Universally the
migration lsquophenomenonrsquo was and has been as a result of varying factors and in
response to certain causes and events such as demographic growth environmental
changes development vs underdevelopment and the seeking of lsquobetterrsquo
opportunities (Castles and Miller 2008) Others have turned to migration to seek jobs
often located or perceived to be concentrated in larger urban centres (Collinson
and Adazu 2006 Castles and Miller 2008)
Migration can occur as a voluntary or forced process This study is particularly
interested in the event of migration that becomes forced migration when the
circumstances of individuals and families leave them little or no choice but to pursue
lsquohopersquo away from their native home-base (Castles and Miller 2008) Arguably this was
characteristic of the hostel model Hostels enabled mines and later other industries to
suppose and cause that hostel dwellers had homes in rural areas (Collinson 2006)
Seemingly the rural populace was the lsquodesiredrsquo workforce ushered into the city and
mines and exploited as labourers for the development of the urban-based economy
(Thurman 1997)
According to Thurman (1997) the residents of hostels were typically considered as
rural traditionalists and lsquodangerousrsquo outsiders by the residents of townships which
surrounded the hostel Their physical as well as social isolation meant that they often
retained strong links with their rural home-base (Segal 1991) This involved the
Page | 30
periodic movement of individual household members between the hostel and their
rural homes (Thurman 1997) The ruralurban linkages which were subsequently
fashioned became a distinguishing feature of not just hostel dwellers but the black
African populace and as a part of their experience of urban life (Collinson and
Adazu 2006) The costly urban world was thus considered by many as merely a place
of work (Segal 1991 and Ramphele 1993)
This type of migration - also often referred to as lsquocircularrsquo or lsquooscillatingrsquo migration -
became characteristic of a sort of temporary sentiment to life and living in the city
(Dyiki 2006) Additionally the events of circular migration presented certain
household dynamics and challenges in maintaining the often faint links between the
migrant and the households family left behind (Collionson 2006 Ramphele 1993)
Conceivably hostel dwellers have for a long time had a common rural orientation
(Segal 1991) ldquoIt has been repeatedly demonstrated that migrants do not leave
behind the countryside in their journey to the cityrdquo and this rural consciousness has
remained central to the migrant labour population (Segal 1991 9)
Within contemporary society the concept of lsquothe new economies of labour
migrationrsquo has emerged as an alternative position and argues that migration can be
and has become a household strategy (Collinson and Adazu 2006) According to
Collinson and Adazu (2006) within their analysis of contemporary migration patterns
migration has now largely become something that is purposefully chosen by
members of a household family This phenomenon involves the temporary migration
of some individuals within the household family in pursuit of opportunities towards
the collective betterment of the family household or even their broader community
(Collinson and Adazu 2006) Under this model of migration family and community
networks are considered to play an important and supporting role in facilitating
migration between urban-based and village-based households families (Collinson
and Adazu 2006) What is then required of the migrant is thatheshe reciprocate the
initial support offered by hisher household family community as received in hisher
rural-base (Collinson and Adazu 2006)
While in some respect migration is becoming a lsquolonged-forrsquo process and somewhat of
a deliberate choice on the other hand adverse circumstances force families
households to partake in this process as a means of survival (Collinson and Adazu
2006) The ability of migrants to maintain both an urban and rural residence in
whatever context ie historic or contemporary continues to present a social
geographic and economically complex state of affairs (Pienaar and Crofton (2005)
Page | 31
223 The notion of bedhold
The context of hostels designed to be uncomfortable and uninviting the closest
likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo was in the form of a bed Every aspect of life and
survival in hostels revolved around a bed (Ramphele 1993) According to Ramphele
(1993) this in turn perpetuated a circumstance of lsquoclientelismrsquo and blurred the lines of
patronage when it came to the exchanging of the membership of beds and when
beds were to be allocated or reallocated (Ramphele 1993) The ill-defined and fluid
relationship of patronage between bed-holders would in some respect function like
and resemble households (Ramphele 1993 Segal 1991 Mosoetsa 2011)
In some sense bed-holders assumed an intermediary role and served an informal
function as lsquolandlordsrsquo thus as proprietors of the bedhold (Ramphele 1993) Hostel
dwellers became lsquobed-holdersrsquo rather than lsquohouse-holdersrsquo in the urban space
(Segal 1991) It became unduly problematic that the bed was the only space over
which they could have any measure of control It after all distorted the perceptions
hostel dwellers developed of themselves in relation to their environment constraining
them to varying degrees (Ramphele 1993) Ramphele (1993) argues that the limits set
by physical space in hostels also defined in very clear terms the inside versus the
outside security versus insecurity family versus non-family and urban versus rural She
further argues that onersquos very identify in the hostel and their lsquolegal existencersquo in the
urban space depended on their attachment to a bed (Ramphele 1993) According
to Ramphele (1993) the bed acted as a sort of mediator thus lsquoa go-betweenrsquo the
hostel dwellers and the rest of society to which they remain somewhat disconnected
and possibly indifferent (Ramphele 1993)
224 The stigma of hostel life
The stigma of hostel life gave a rather conspicuous meaning to lsquoblack urban lifersquo and
their experience(s) of life in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were badly
designed poorly built and many suffer years of neglect (Thurman 1997) There have
been a number of authors who have argued that hostel dwellers suffered a great
injustice to their humanity their perception of self constrained relations with others
and a constant struggle to maintain family networks with their often rural-base
(Goldblatt and Mentjies 1996)
Page | 32
The living conditions in hostels have been expressed in basic terms as shocking
disgusting inhumane cruel and intolerable by both scholars and residents of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Hostel accommodation is undesirable both aesthetically and
conceptually and there are a number of common features which characterise most
hostels a lack of privacy overcrowded and poor living conditions very limited space
and a serious state of disrepair (Ramphele 1993) Failing to delineate private
personal space the purpose of hostels was to ensure a compliant labour force (Segal
1991)
According to Ramphele (1993) hostels represent physical space that is not only
limited but is also limiting Ramphele makes a distinction between the circumstance
and living arrangements of hostel dwellers and township residents Arguing that
although physical overcrowding of sleeping accommodation between the two
(hostel dwellers and township residents) many not be much different in terms of the
ratio of people to roomsbeds (Ramphele 1993) For township residents it is most likely
that they would be sharing these limited facilities with kin or friends rather than
complete strangers (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of hostels some men
women may adapt too well to living in single-sex hostels and would find change too
difficult to cope with (Ramphele 1993)
225 Family versus household configurations
The terms family and household are not necessarily synonymous According to the
Department of Social Development (2012) ldquoa household comprises of either (i) a
single person who makes provision(s) for hisher food or other essentials for living or (ii)
a group of at least two or more people living together who make common provision
for their food and other essentialsrdquo (White Paper on Families in South Africa 2012 11)
Moreover the Department notes that a household can contain a family yet the
members of the household are not always necessarily a family further remarking that
ldquoa household performs the functions of providing a place of dwelling and the sharing
of resources and these functions can be performed among people who are related
by blood or people without any such relationshiprdquo (White Paper on Families in South
Africa 2012 11) This distinction of family and household configurations is useful to this
study for two main reasons (a) as it has been suggested that one of the broad aims of
the hostel conversion approach is to introduce facilitate lsquofamily lifersquo and to inject a
family quality into these historically single-sex environments (b) Is it then supposed by
the Sethokga hostel conversion project that the household configurations in the
hostel are at present existing wholly in the absence of family configurations
Page | 33
It is important to be mindful of the fact that with time households have become
more complex and family structures more diffused (Mosoetsa 2011) Hostel dwellers
through years of living under space constraints and in single-sex accommodation
have developed certain ideologies practices and habits (Thurman 1997) Arguably
the hostel system redefined and reshaped family and household configurations and
constructed a complex social setting (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of male
occupied hostels relationships among men are characterised by hierarchy and
Ramphele (1993) notes that this is legitimised by lsquotraditionrsquo and is based on age
differences The older men are more likely to occupy positions of authority and be
regarded as the lsquoheadsrsquo of the household and in authority to organise the affairs of
the household Whereas the younger men would be cast in the role of attending to
duties considered lsquotypicalrsquo to women and that is the upkeep of the household ie
cleaning cooking In this lsquomanrsquos worldrsquo tradition and age regulate the day-to-day
function of the household (Ramphele 1993) The links between the men and the
families they had have left behind has arguably become increasingly scant and
incoherent (Grieger et al 2013) With the blurring of their lsquobindingrsquo reciprocal
obligations and support the conception of family life was redefined and put under
considerable strain as a result of migrant labour laws and the criminalisation of job-
seeking activity in urban areas of their rural wives partners (Segal 1991)
In both family and household configurations shared obligations and mutual support
takes many forms (Mapetla 2005) The family structure is perceived to be the
lsquocommander and regulator of the activities and conduct of the individual members
The family structure has been set apart from a household in that a household is more
of a residential unit where related andor none-related individuals in a sense lsquoeat
from the same potrsquo (Mosoetsa 2011) In some cases the individuals and members of
a household provide themselves jointly with food andor other essentials however a
household can also consist of a person who lives alone The distinguishing feature is
that a family configuration consists of people individuals who have a blood-kin
connection and this can include immediate and extended relatives but the same
does not necessarily always hold true for household configurations (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005 Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001)
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing
South Africa can still somewhat be regarded as a traditionally patrilineal society
where land and property are traced through the male lineage where upon marriage
Page | 34
a woman is required to leave her native home to reside with her husband at his home
(Mapetla 2005) This system has been more inclined to empower men (Ziehl 2001)
Subsequently within contemporary society and within the lsquonew politics of gender
relationsrsquo property and land ownership have since become a highly contentious
subject Therefore the issue of housing is quite a significant one and warrants some
reflection particularly the aspect of men and housing (Mapetla 2005)
Gender roles have steadily been changing and are increasingly becoming ill-defined
(Ziehl 2001) So how can or rather how should housing projects and interventions
such as hostel conversion projects be more gender sensitive inclusive representative
and reflective of the changing gender roles both in a social and spatial sense
Gender considerations regarding housing and housing projects need to be mindful of
the innate differentiation between men and women and their not always uniform
needs and interaction(s) with space (Mapetla 2005) The often male bias when it
comes to access to housing might just further be perpetuated through hostel
conversion projects The question here is then does this new conception of a
reconfigured living environment in the form of family units make provision(s) towards
addressing any of the housing-related gender biases What do these projects
consider important in terms of gender issues if at all how have these issues been
factored into the projects
Gender and housing related theory has often argued strongest the case of women in
their inability to access housing land the law and related funding (Ziehl 2001) The
issues of gender relations and access to housing have become increasingly topical
(Mosoetsa 2011) Womenrsquos rights access to the law resources and social amenities
have been areas which have gained a significant amount of traction in both policy
and academic circles owing to historically discriminatory laws (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005) However in South Africa and perhaps this is true for many other
societies traditionally culturally and even spiritually men are still to a significant extent
regarded as the head of household the foremost provider for their families (Mapetla
2005)
Within the context of hostels migrant labour laws which also made it a point that the
remuneration of its African labour workforce was as horrendous as the conditions they
lived in shaped a particular aspect of menrsquos relation to housing in the urban context
and their experiences (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In a study conducted by Segal
(1991) a group of men living in a hostel were interviewed to give their account of life
in the hostel According to Segal (1991) it became apparent that the men tolerated
the hostel because they felt humiliated by even the thought of losing their roles as the
Page | 35
provider for their family Some men suggested that they could and would not bring
their wives or children to the hostel for even a brief visit (Segal 1991) In their minds
they were better off alone in the citymine because the burden of their own survival
was already enormous (Segal 1991)
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy
Large sections of the South African state have continued to be institutionally
ineffective unsustainable and dysfunctional (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert 2011) Post-
1994 efforts towards nation-building and state formation in the country have taken
many forms a unitary state the inauguration of a new president of the Republic of
South Africa and the promulgation of the 1996 Constitution of the Republic(Barnet
1999) Furthermore the ideals of nation building and state formation would attempt
to diffuse into a sound and convergent form what was once opposite and adverse
(von Holdt 2010)
The housing deficit in the country was and has continued to be one of the greatest
challenges facing the government particularly the inadequate provision and access
to housing for the black majority who had been rendered destitute and occupying
dreadful accommodation (Thurman 1997) In what could better be regarded as
temporary disaster relief areas than housing suitable for any human to call lsquohomersquo
(Ramphele 1993) Post-apartheid bureaucratic inefficiency class formation
redundant budgetary rituals antagonistic attitudes towards public service vocation
and authority has greatly stifled service delivery imperatives ie social housing
provision (von Holdt 2010) Undoubtedly the role of policy towards addressing issues
such as housing and service delivery is a significant one (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert
2011) this will be discussed further in chapter four
228 The role and significance of community public participation in hostel conversion to
family unitrsquos projects
Public participation in any context is a complex and at times a contentious exercise
Academic literature on community public participation tends to presuppose an
experience or existence of informal unambiguous or authentic relations in
community participation processes (Mdunyelwa 2015) This particularly in housing
related projects and programmes with the assumption that if all the stakeholders
involved are consulted the process of participation is likely to yield positive results and
success (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) In South Africa the notion of public
Page | 36
community participation has gained popularity as a democratic practice essential
for development and nation-building (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their research project entitled ldquoA
Case Study of participation in the City Deep Hostel Redevelopmentrdquo suggests that
there are more complex and less diffused forces at play According to Benit-Gbaffou
and Mathoho (2010) the central question often becomes when and at what point
can one say people have effectively or meaningfully participated This question is
especially relevant and significance to hostel conversion projects and to efforts to re-
configure hostels as lsquofamily units suitable for family lifersquo (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010) According to state policy the hostel conversion redevelopment approach is
and has been a nation-wide intervention initiated by the post-1994 government to
redevelop convert hostels in efforts to de-stigmatise these historically-laden spaces
(Dyiki 2006) Moreover the current Minister of Human Settlement has of late stated
on a number of media platforms the hostel conversion approach also seeks to
rehabilitate these historically single-sex migrant labour compounds into family
apartmentsunits to promote a family-oriented setting (Sisulu 2015) According to a
2001 text by Statistics South Africa ldquoconverted or upgraded hostels should be treated
in the same way as a block of flats and each unit considered as a separate housing
unitrdquo (Statistics South Africa Census2001 3)
The importance and usefulness of public community participation in hostel
conversion projects have been a widely and overly debated topic However this
does not wholly take away from the fact that there are many and varied obstacles
and challenges when it comes to the actual practice and experience of
participation on the ground (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) Even while the political
and socio-economic contexts of every project are varied with different structures and
the coordination of stakeholders take on different forms (Mdunyelwa 2015) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) argue that participation has often become a political
process riddled in processes of negotiation and rampant differences of opinion
coupled with a mix of personal andor political ambitions (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010)
Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their study of the City Deep Hostel
Redevelopment Project outlined a number of issues which the project encountered
before during and after the hotel redevelopment project there included
Page | 37
Before the redevelopment process
Managing change while also trying to mitigate violence the unauthorised
occupation of tenants wanting to gain the benefits of the redevelopment project
and the allocation of units (as a contentious challenge) were cited as challenges
encountered before the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
During the process
Challenges around the design of the units (limitations and constraints with respect to
skills time and finances) the issue of labour the provision of public and social
facilities services (ie cregraveches play areas for the children) were cited as being
encountered during the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
Issues after the project
Tariff rates (with electricity as one of the biggest concerns) along with the
disagreement and discontentment around rental payments were cited as the
challenges which were encountered post the hostel redevelopment process A
central question and concern that arose focused on whether the hostel did not just
became a renovated workersrsquo hostel or if it actually did change into actual family
units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
With the study area for this research in mind I am left wondering if the issues identified
by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) are unique to the City Deep contextproject
or are they to some extent representative and reverberate to the broader
challenges and limitations of hostel conversion projects across the country Certainly
there is some value to participation when it comes to hostel conversion
redevelopment but the process of participation particularly within the context of
hostels as politically and socio-economically volatile environments will most likely be
confronted by sturdy issues of inherent sensitivities and nuances (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010) This is what Mdunyelwa (2015) decisively refers to as binary cultural
political and social structures alluding to the sentiment that some hostel dwellers are
in some respect men and women of two minds set free from the physical shackles of
oppression yet still sadly unable and ill-equipped to live and transform their thinking
well beyond that (Mdunyelwa 2015)
Page | 38
23 Conclusion
Typically the body of work that exists on hostels is unambiguously and largely
concentrated on the historically-laden context of hostels It especially articulates
issues of violent conflict and tension within hostels and their surrounding areas
Conflict situations are often captioned as hostel versus township lsquowarsrsquo There is an
important political backdrop to this which relates to the rural urban links made
mention of in this chapter
Furthermore the poor living conditions of hostels the inadequate provision of services
and social amenities should be considered The loss of family life and the sense that
hostels pose as limited spaces which is a negative reflection on to dignity of its
inhabitants are some of elements associated with the stigma of hostel life (Bonner
and Nieftagodien 2012 Ramphele 1993) This has to quite a significant extent
remained a present-day and associated reality of the hostel setting and has posed
vast challenges to hostel conversion redevelopment projects
This chapter has argued that the landscape of hostels has by and large remained
complex at times perplexing and highly contentious As a resultant the wicked
consequences of the hostel system have been many and varied but all of which
warrant due attention The theoretical backdrop on hostels has been useful in
developing themes that resonate with the case study Sethokga hostel Of particular
relevance to the case study will be role and significance of community public
participation in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Highlighting some of the
issues encountered before and during the project as the project has not yet been
completed Certain aspects of the discussion on key concepts theories arguments
and ideas and how they resonate with the case study will be explored further
Particularly the notion of bedhold the aspect of men and housing the stigma of
hostel life and the resultant consequences of the hostel system will be critically
discussed in chapter five which examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project
Page | 39
Introducing Sethokga hostel
3 Introduction
In addition to the study area this chapter will in greater detail describe and locate
Sethokga hostel It examines its local as well as municipal context and presents a
visual narrative of the hostel The aim of the visual narrative is to provide the reader
with a lsquosensersquo of the physical setting of the hostel thus to provide the reader with a
visual depiction of the multifaceted circumstance of the hostel and the complex
challenges in which its residents endure Chapter three largely seeks to provide the
reader with an impression of the context in which the Sethokga hostel conversion
project is taking place
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)
In the period between 1890 and the late 1920s Ekurhuleni (at the time referred to as
the East Rand region of the Transvaal Province) experienced increased numbers of
black male workersmigrants This was as a result of a surge in the gold mining sector
which took place on the Witwatersrand gold reefs (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
According to Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) of the 15 000 workers that were
employed in the sector some 5 000 worked in what is now called the Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality With time the number of workers in the Ekurhuleni area
continued to rise considerably most of who were oscillating migrants who were either
accommodated in labour compounds such as hostels or shanty settlements in
townships across Ekurhuleni such as Tembisa Duduza Tsakane Kwa-Thema and so
forth (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) also argue that for most of the period of the
booming mining sector in the Witwatersrand reef to well into the countryrsquos
democratic dispensation political contention in hostels had long been a common
feature throughout the region As a consequence hostels and a number of the
townships in Ekurhuleni have somewhat continued to exist within a circumstance of
deep-seated antagonistic political and socio-economic conditions (Bonner and
Nieftagodien 2012)
Sethokga hostel is one of the largest hostels in the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan region
according to the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis Study in 2014 there
Page | 40
were approximately 12 120 residents living in the hostel (Demacon 2014) Of that
roughly 4 000 have since the beginning of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
been relocated or reallocated within other blocks in the hostel to make way for the
construction of the family units (Demacon 2014) Some of the relocations of residents
have been to alternative sites outside the hostel to either Enhlanzeni hostel or
Vusimuzi hostel both situated in the Tembisa area (Demacon 2014)Interestingly
Enhlanzeni as well as Vusimizi hostels are also experiencing issues of overcrowding
poor living conditions and similar socio-economic conditions to Sethokga Moreover
neither Enhlanzeni nor Vusimuzi hostel have or are undergoing upgrading
conversion It was not clear in the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis
Study what the reasons for relocating the residents of Sethokga to these hostels were
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni hostel and
Vusimuzi hostel
Source Demacon 2014
Page | 41
311 Geographic description of the study
Sethokga hostel was built in 1980 and much like other hostels across the country the
Sethokga hostel was badly designed poorly built and has been suffering years of
neglect Sethokga hostel is a public sector type hostel and is owned by the
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Sethokga was built to accommodate male
migrant labourers from a range of industries (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Similar to
numerous other hostels men could live in the hostel so long as they had work in
industries but wives partners and families were prohibited from residence (Thurman
1997) They were entitled only to short-term visiting permits Regular and violent raids
which were carried out by authorities during the day and at night would rigorously
enforce these regulations to chase away arrest or bus back the wives partners and
families of the men back to the homelands (Thurman 1997)
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi initially the hostel
accommodated a lsquomixturersquo of residents black men across all tribes and ethnicities
but he recalls the change that occurred in the 1990s in response to political shifts He
recalls that ldquoafter the release of Mandela and when they started preaching lsquothis
thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions happened according to who was Zulu or
Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Below the ward
councillor explains what he saw as some of the factors that led to what is currently
the strong predominance of Pedi and Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel
suggesting that ldquoThere were mixed feeling when talks were rife concerning
negotiations that could lead to possible elections because the IFP (Inkatha Freedom
Party) was rejecting such a notion At the time it was a situation of the Zulursquos terrorizing
the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa and standing with the white man The
Zulursquos did not like such an idea which caused a divide among the Zulu and Xhosa
This led to conflict between the Xhosa and the Zulu There was fighting everywhere in
the country and you found some Pedis Venda and Tsongarsquos ran away from certain
hostels because they were being chased out and some landed up in Sethokga (
Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) The points made by Cllr Mohlapamaswi flag some
interesting points for instance that this hostel in some respect played the role of a
place of refuge and might affect how residents view it
Sethokga hostel is situated on approximately 22 hectares of land and consists of 29 U-
shaped single and two storey dormitories but mainly consists of the two storey walk-up
dormitories (Demacon 2014) The hostel lies on medium dolomitic soil despite this it
has been said and reported that over the years this has not had a significant impact
Page | 42
on much of the structural qualities of the hostel (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) The
structural sturdiness of the hostel is said to have been mitigated through precautions
such as drainage and the assembly of lsquowellrsquo positioned pavements (Demacon 2014)
According to the ward councillor there are a few women and children living in the
hostel although it is not quite clear how many They are however not recognised as
lsquolegitimatersquo residence of Sethokga (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Arguably a
number of the hostel redevelopment conversion projects that have taken place
across the country have been as a response to the prevailing presence of women
and children who had come to live in the hostel The fact that this hostel has
remained predominantly male occupied presents a number contextual dimensions
to the hostel conversion project This will be explored in chapter five which will
examine the conceptualisation of the hostel conversion project
According to Thurman (1997) it is not uncommon in hostels for up to three families to
live in one room measuring 20 square metres Such rooms were designed to
accommodate two to three workers or even up to twenty people to share a sink a
shower and toilet (Thurman 1997) Yet lsquowholersquo families ie husbands wives children
or extended families have not moved into Sethokga Overcrowding remains a
concern and privacy is scarce in the hostel (Demacon 2014) The dormitories have
very limited physical space and little room for manoeuvre The typical floor plan of a
hostel is provided on the next page and depicts the rigid rudimentary and restrained
design of the hostel compound Sethokga hostel has identical floor plans and
elevations
Page | 43
Floor plan of a typical dormitory compound
Source Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
Figure 1 Ground Floor Plan
Figure 2 First Floor Plan
Figure 3 Elevation
Page | 44
312 Locality
The hostel is situated in the East Rand region of the Gauteng province within the
municipal administrative jurisdiction of the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (EMM)
in the Kempton Park ndash Tembisa Customer Care Area It is located in the north-eastern
region region B of the EMM in the township of Tembisa and lies to the south of the
Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and to the east of the City of Johannesburg
Moreover the hostel is lies between the Kempton Park Pretoria railway link near
Oakmoor station thus a multipurpose and inter-as well as intra-regional public
transport node It is well serviced in terms of public transport and easily accessible
from the R21 (Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
Map 2 Locality map
Source Google maps 2015
Source EkurhuleniGIS 2015
Page | 45
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex
313 Local and municipal context
Tembisa is one of the largest townships in the metro and it is situated in region A of the
EMM towards the north-western end of the municipality The hostel lies in ward four of
the metro to the east of Midrand and to the west of one of the most affluent suburbs
in region A Glen Marais along with other high income areas such as Serengeti Golf
Estate Midstream and the suburb of Edenvale (Demacon 2014)
The Integrated Development Plan (IDP) for the Oakmoor area Area 19 of the metrorsquos
Local Integrated Development Plan (LIDP) was last prepared in 2000 The report
contained among its leading aims to establish an integrated framework to guide and
facilitate development interventions in the area (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000) It was documented in the report that the SDP would guide the
Page | 46
municipalityrsquos decisions in the development and management of the area in a way
that the report articulates as follows by encouraging and setting the framework for
private sector investment and initiatives and by seeking to strengthen economic
activity in the area through the identification of specific projects and programmes
which would kick-start development and lastly working towards improving service
delivery (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) The report reviews the
historically context of the area and argues that basically no provision was made for
service delivery or the adequate management of land and no consideration of land
use imperatives was given This was the case throughout the Tembisa Township (SJN
Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Furthermore the report established that the general land-use pattern across most of
the township was mainly comprised of residential developments It was in this 2000
Integrated Development Plan that it was overtly and in retrospect alluded to that
Tembisa had been established to function at that time as a dormitory settlement for
the neighbouring economic centres of the East Rand region such as Kempton Park
Olifantsfontein and Midrand (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
An abstract in 2000 SDF report(SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000 stated
the following that investigations had confirmed that the Sethokga hostel buildings
were structurally sound except for some weather proofing of external walls and basic
finishes to walls floors and ceiling Some repair work to cracks and precautions to pre-
empt future cracking may be necessary but the hostel blocks would offer little
difficulty in terms of conversion into single and family units According to the report
there seemed to be more problems with engineering services For example the
internal sewer reticulation was said to be so dilapidated that it may have needed to
be replaced entirely Parts of the water supply network would need to be replaced
fire hydrants installed electricity supply upgraded and grading of roads and storm-
water disposal required substantial attention (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
When the completed report was presented in 2000 it set out a case that the
municipality was currently negotiating with a non-profit organisation to acquire hostel
land and convert the hostel buildings into single and family units and manage such
housing stock (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) It further documented
that the lsquoultimatersquo number of dwelling units would be about 1200 with the first phase
of development to deliver 500 units The report suggested that the development
would be undertaken by an external organisation and that few planning guidelines
Page | 47
would need to be proposed to harmonize Sethokga hostel residential complex with
the rest of the Tembisa Township In the report it is assumed that the hostel conversion
would should result in a lsquosecurity complexrsquo type of housing development and
access to the complex would be gained mainly from local distributors such as the
extension of MbizaIzimbongi Street and Nyarhi Street (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000)
The report argued for change in the household profile of the hostel and this would
result in an increased demand for additional social facilities such as schools cregraveches
churches libraries play area(s) etc It was found in the report that space intensive (in
terms of size) social facilities eg cregraveches and a multipurpose centre should be
encouraged within the complex (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Additionally limited retail specifically corner shops should be established within the
complex Lastly the report suggested that it was important to align the services in the
area with the rest of the EMM and ensure adequate capacity at points where the
services connected into the hostel Roads in particular were highlighted as important
in this regard to ensure continuity and appropriate distribution of traffic movement
What is more the report states that traffic should be discouraged within the new
settlement (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
The SDF marked the entire Sethokga hostel complex as lsquohostel upgradingrsquo married to
public open space within the vicinity of the complex churches sports fields and
mixed use areas were proposed in the SDF (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
Page | 48
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework (SDF) 2000
The development proposals in the 2000 Oakmoor area19 SDF proposed that Sethokga hostel be
Redeveloped into family units The SDF also proposed mixed use nodal developments within and around
the Oakmoor area and proposed additional facilities such as cregraveches schools and recreational
facilities in certain areas
Source SJN Development Planning Consultants Planning Area 19 Oakmoor Development
Plan Development Proposals Final Report 2000
This SDF for the area is quite old and has not been updated
since this 2000 plan
Sethokga
hostel
Page | 49
There are 22 hostels across Ekurhuleni which are spread across six regions in the metro
(Demacon 2014) Region A has two hostels of which one is government owned
region B has three hostels of which government owns two regions C D and E hosts
one hostel respectively while region F has sixteen hostels (it is not clear how many are
owned by government) (Demacon 2014)
In terms of social facilities and amenities the study area is situated within a 3km radius
from two schools Rabasotho Combined School and Philena Middle School It is also
within a 2km radius from a healthcare facility - Esselen Park Satellite Clinic - and within
a 1km radius from a sporting facility - Esselen Park Sports School of Excellence
(Demacon 2014) The nearest police station is roughly 6km away and a lsquogenerousrsquo
number of shopping as well as entertainment centres are found within a 15 to 20km
radius of the hostel The nearest taxi route is less than 100m with the nearest train
stations including the Tembisa Limindlela and Kaalfontein stations all falling within a
10km radius (Demacon 2014)
In 2013 the Tembisa economy contributed 83 to the overall economy of the EMM
whilst Ekurhuleni contributed 253 to the overall economy of the Gauteng province
in 2013 (Demacon 2014) Sethokga hostel forms part of the Kempton Park Tembisa
precinct and according the Sethokga Hostels Mixed Typology Market Analysis Report
it falls within the development context of the Kempton Park Tembisa precinct It hosts
a range of housing typologies supported under various housing programmes
(Demacon 2014) which include but are not limited to Informal Settlement Upgrading
programmes and projects Integrated Residential Development Programmes(s) and
Gap Market Housing Units According to this report there also exists several
opportunities for the development of medium to higher density residential
developments (Demacon 2014) The EMMs 2010 Metropolitan Spatial Development
Framework suggests that among the several intentions of the metro the EMM will seek
to expand the affordable housing market and that it will seek to accommodate a
wider range of the metrorsquos populace by making a range of housing options available
for people across different income groupings (Demacon 2014)
This next section exhibits the lsquoambiencersquo of Sethokga hostel as it currently stands It
delves into some detail regarding the current setting of the hostel and takes the
reader through the authorrsquos experience being in the hostel and lsquotravellingrsquo through its
narrow corridors It shares my experience of going into this dauntingly male
dominated environment riddled with metaphorical tones of disempowerment
despondency and neglect All the images displayed here were taken by the author
Page | 50
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel
In terms of its infrastructure the hostel is said to still be somewhat structurally sound
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005) Aesthetically however it appears quite old and rundown
and leaves a lot to be desired The neglected state of refuse and rubble removal
adds to the wear and tear appearance of the hostel Each of the blocks that make-
up the hostel consists of separate dormitories and entry into each dormitory is gained
through a common access point - a door - that leads into a communal area with a
basic cooking and dining area There are no ceilings in any of the dormitories The
paint-work both inside and outside has long worn out In general the hostel appears
especially dull and unsightly
321 Built form architecture
Figure 4
The hostel is old and run-down
The adjoining hostel blocks are lined with a
number of lsquoinformalrsquo traders
This area that leads into one of the hostel
blocks is where a resident displays his goods
for selling
Page | 51
A number of the men have cars which they
park in their respective blocks
Walk-up that leads into one of the dorms
that is later photographed and shows the
condition of the interior of the hostel
The hostel is in an obvious state of neglect
and refuse removal is ignored
I spotted a number of chickens roaming about
in the hostel and a small vegetable garden
near one of the entrances into a dorm
There is one entry and exit point into most of
the blocks in the hostel
Page | 52
Figure 5
This is a communal cooking area It was said
that because the stove is so old and has a
number of issues the electricity powering the
stove is never turned off and so it runs
constantly through the day and night time
The area next to the cooking area is where
groceries and other goods are stored for
safe-keeping
This communal dining area also leads into
the rest of the dorm and the place where the
hostel dwellers sleep
None of the dorms have ceilings or any
added furnishings (ie lighting) The hostel
has never been re-painted or renovated
since it was built in the early 1980s
Page | 53
This corridor leads into the bedrooms where
the men sleep Sheets andor curtains lead to
what felt like very restricted distressing and
unpleasent living quarters
The compartments offer very limited room to
move around and offer little privacy There
are two beds per compartment with up to
three people sharing a bed The living
conditions are as what Ramphele (1993)
described as constraining to varying degrees
since it is a physically restricted environment
with blurred boundaries of personal private
space The physical proximity to others offers
practically no prospect for privacy or liberty
to accommodate visitors
Page | 54
Figure 6
322 Municipal amenities
Male urinal
Communal toilet
Communal shower
Most of the hostel blocks in the hostel have
electricity yet it seems to be offered for
free
The entrance (door) leading to the one
communal shower and toilet facility There is
one bathroom per dorm
Page | 55
Figure 7
323 The adjoining area
Most of the blocks in the hostels have
communal indoor as well as outdoor taps
with running water provided without
charge
lsquoInformalrsquo activity trade takes place in
and around the hostel
The council offices are situated adjacent to
one of the hostel blocks across the street
The municipality does not collect refuse in
the hostel so it is up to the hostel residents to
dispose of their refuse (it was not clear why
the municipality did not collect refuse in the
hostel)
Page | 56
According to the (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) entry and access to the hostel are
determined by ones ability to negotiate for a bed Much like what was described by
Ramphele (1993) the closest likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo in hostels was in the form
of a bed this persists at Sethokga To some extent every aspect of life and survival in
Sethokga revolves around a bed
One gains entry into Sethokga through a block chairperson (Sololo interview 2015)
Some of the functions and responsibilities of these block chairpersonrsquos is to know what
is happening in that particular hostel block The illustration given by the economic
representative for the ward Mr Sololo was that
ldquoWhatever which has been happening in a particular block the chairperson
should be aware of it and should call a meeting Letrsquos say if you are sitting in a
block here and you have got a jukebox and you find that you are selling
liquor and now they tell you that by 10 orsquoclock you close down and the music
should be off Then you do not comply with that the block chairperson will
report you to the hostel committee and they will sit and come up with a fine
for you if you do not listen even after they fine you they will chase you out of
the hostelrdquo
According to Sololo interview (2015) the block chairpersons maintain peace and
order and need to ensure that any conflict is mediated They are elected by the
residents of a given block and are entrusted with their grievances Ideally they should
be first point of contact before anything is to be escalated to the ward councillor ie
if a pipe bursts and they are without water This would need to be reported to the
EMM by either the block chairperson and if the problem remains unresolved it is then
escalated to the ward councillor (Sololo interview 2015)
33 Conclusion
Chapter three has explored a number of elements which model the status quo of the
study field Ironically the conditions in the hostel are not much different to many of
the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg Sethokga hostel also resembles
many other hostels across the country The hostel is overcrowded there is little room
to manoeuvre and there is an obvious lack of privacy The hostel is a possible health
hazard to those who live in it
Page | 57
This chapter shared some of my own experience of the hostel My experience consisted out
of being in the hostel taking photographs in and around the hostel and engaging with the
living environment Inside the hostel I was engulfed by its narrow poorly lit and what felt like
stifling corridors Corridors divided by curtains and sheets led into what were very confined
sleeping compartments Beds offer a place of rest for those who have voluntarily or
involuntarily sought refuge in the hostel Many after all consider the hostels as a lsquobetterrsquo
alternative to homelessness The experience for me was unlike any I have ever felt since the
circumstance of my life has provided a certain comfort that was surely challenged in the
modest time that I spent at Sethokga Chapter four examines what has been the states
approach to hostel conversion
Page | 58
The statesrsquo approach to hostel conversion
4 Introduction
The discussion in this chapter will reflect and review South African state policy post-1994
that concerns hostels Chapter four will also critically discuss and describe the
fundamentals of what have been considered two of the leading approaches to hostel
redevelopment conversion namely the Hostel Redevelopment Programmes (HRP) and
the Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach
There have been a number of state interventions post-1994 that have seemingly been a
lsquosignrsquo of governments lsquodesirersquo to improve the living conditions of not just hostel residents
but of a vast majority of South Africanrsquos who were subjected to poor living conditions
(Thurman 1997) However for the purpose of this study there will be particular focus on
interventions around hostels In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005) concur with a few
other authors that during post democracy the South African government introduced
along with other housing programmes a hostel upgrading conversion programme
aimed primarily at converting hostels into integrated family-oriented developments
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
South Africarsquos housing policy was launched in 1994 and the housing subsidy scheme
promised to deliver one million houses in five years (UrbanLankMark 2011) This would be
delivered through a range of subsidy mechanisms (UrbanLankMark 2011) According to
Dyiki interview(2015) in 1995 or about 1996 a National Hostel Redevelopment Policy was
approved and was among one of the primary national housing programmes (Dyiki
interview 2015) To facilitate nation-building and effective state formation it was believed
that social programmes such as state funded housing programmes would play a pivotal
role in this regard (Netshitenzhe 2011) Moreover the nation-building agenda saw the
government set the country bold and far-reaching goals and these somewhat became
associated with certain policies ideologies and norms (Netshitenzhe 2011) However
redundant budgetary rituals inadequate feasibility studies weak project evaluation
bureaucratic inefficiency managing community expectations and political interference
have been some of the issues that have held back progress (von Holdt 2010 and
Pienaar 2010) As a result housing provided by government has often been poorly
Page | 59
located and in some respect it has continued to perpetuate a reality of spatial
segregation (Charlton et al 2014)
This next section will describe how the hostel conversion approach has been articulated
through state policy through subsequent grants and schemes
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach
Through the provision of grants and schemes government has made efforts to provide
funding for the redevelopment conversion of hostels However there has been
somewhat of a bias on public sector hostels as the grants are provided mainly for the
redevelopment conversion of hostels owned by municipalities or provincial government
(Department of Human Settlements 2015) In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
provide a synopsis of some of governmentsrsquo earliest approaches to addressing lsquothe hostel
issuersquo (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) This is summarised as follows
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Peoples Housing Process
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme (this will be discussed in
section 42)
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Arguably the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units
Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of state efforts to grapple with the vast
challenges around hostels hostel life and the social ills that have become endemic to
hostels (Dyiki 2006) The essence of the approaches listed below was that hostels would
be redeveloped converted to create sustainable human living conditions To re-
integrated these hostel communities into the surrounding township communities (Pienaar
and Cloete 2005)
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership was premised on
the notion that Developers this could also include the municipality would be able to
submit project proposals for the development of housing on stands that were serviced for
people who qualified in terms of eligibility criteria eg a combined household income of
Page | 60
the beneficiary versus the available subsidy amount provided by the state Households
would then be required to contribute to the development (that is the construction of their
house) from their own savings or through what was referred to as lsquosweet equityrsquo
(providing their own material and labour) Locational and geographic factors would also
affect the amount of the subsidy by 2005 Pienaar and Cloete (2005) noted that this
subsidy had delivered an approximate 13 million homes which were primarily low-cost
free-standing
In the case of hostels redevelopment one option was that the subsidy could be used to
build new free-standing dwellings for individual full title ownership on unused portions of
land within hostel complexes This option would require sub-division of the land as well as
the installation of additional service Under the provisions of the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme another option would be to convert existing dormitories into family
apartments that could be sold off to beneficiaries under sectional title This sectional title
is a form of ownership where an individual holds title to a dwelling unit it can be a free-
standing unit or part of a multi-unit storey building The individual owns title together
with all the other owners of sectional dwellings on that property an undivided share of the
land on which the dwellings are built (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) However the challenge
was that where existing dormitories were converted and sold under title the projects
would be exposed to a host of problems that sectional title properties generally
encountered in low-income areas in the private sector ie poor management and
maintenance and difficulties in collecting levies and service debts (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process
The Peoplersquos Housing Process was reportedly introduced to enable communities
particularly those in disadvantaged areas to participate in the provision of their own
housing without the participation interference or involvement of private developers
However technical and administrative support and consultation would be offered by
Housing Support Organisations which were approved to serve this function (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005) What were termed as facilitation grants would be made available by the
government to lsquokick-startrsquo the housing projects The beneficiaries could apply for a grant
to pay for the services rendered by the Housing Support Organisation(s) and the housing
subsidy would be the same as for what was contained in the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) hostel residents could as a
community collective make use of this avenue as a means of obtaining ownership of an
improved residence with the assistance of their local authority a non-governmental
Page | 61
organisation (NGO) or perhaps a cluster of professions who could provide support and
administrative assistance as their Housing Support Organisation (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing was introduced in 1995 and was essentially a
variant of the project-linked subsidy provided to non-profit institutions independent of
government and registered as legally approved entities Households earning less than
R3500 per month would be provided through this subsidy with subsidised rental housing
by these entities In 1995 when the subsidy was introduced it carried a once-off capital
grant of R16 000 per dwelling but by 2002 the amount had increased to R27 000 as part of
the governmentrsquos aspiration to promote medium density housing Pienaar and Cloete
(2005) note that because the hostel redevelopment programme had been in limbo for
several years at the time of their study the Institutional Subsidy approach had been
considered as a viable alternative to accelerate hostel conversion projects The tenure
options under this subsidy it was proposed would include
Rental
Co-operative ownership
An instalment sale option in the form of a lsquorent to buyrsquo practice with a
minimum rental period of four years to qualify for the conversion to ownership
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Under the National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
the National Housing Code (for subsidised housing) delineates subsidised housing as
Permanent residential structures that have security of tenure both internal
and external privacy
Housing that has portable water serviced with adequate energy and sanitary
facilities
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing were set
to give effect to the objectives of the Housing Act 1997 which came into effect on 1 April
Page | 62
1998 To ensure quality and durable housing products that complied with particular
minimum standards (National Housing Report 2009) For instance dwellings had to have
a minimum gross floor area of 30m2 but this has since been amended (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005)
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country
Some international interest has been generated to consider intervention in hostels and
efforts to redevelopingconverting hostels The point of this section is to illustrate that
hostels occupied and in some respect have continued to occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are one of many representations of
the physical manifestation of three centuries of systematic racial discrimination and
economic exploitation (Thurman 1997) The consolidation of the migrant labour system
through hostels the poor living conditions of hostels the dishonour of hostel life and the
control they exert on the African populace Saw hostels gaining the attention of a
number of international agencies and authorities who put resources towards and took an
interest in reconfiguring the disposition of hostels (Dyiki interview 2015)
In the period between August 2002 and April 2003 the USAID (United States Agency for
International Development) extended its support to community based approaches to
housing in South Africa and in turn created a platform where it would have input(s) into
South Africarsquos national housing policy (Urban Sector Network 2003)
Hostel redevelopment was supported under a grant provision provided by the USAID this
had two main objectives The first was that policy and information dissemination should
serve as key objectives and secondly that USAID would have a voice in the facilitation of
hostel redevelopments Initially the grant was meant to run from 23 August 2000 to 30
August 2002 but an extension was requested and the grant extended for the period 1
September 2002 to 30 April 2003 (Urban Sector Network 2003) Additionally the on-goings
of the programme instituted under the grant were to include the following activities
Identifying and conducting research into tenure options and feasible
management models for hostels
Identifying possible needs and challenges and to then conduct nation-wide
research in the hostel sector
Facilitating workshops and consolidating policy submissions and to submit
research papers to the Department of Housing
Page | 63
To publish research papers
To conduct mid-term and final evaluation of the programme
Conducting information outreaches where the USN (Urban Sector Network) would
play an essential role in informing government the private sector as well as
communities about the opportunities which could be created through the
redevelopment of hostels (Urban Sector Network2003)
The Urban Sector Network (USN) then proceeded to make specific recommendations on
the hostel redevelopment approach The USN called for the broadening on the scope of
the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme to include all hostels (private and
grey sector) and not just public sector hostel Recommendations were made that the
norms and standards for the redeveloped hostels should be developed along with
national guidelines for the management of redeveloped hostels by local authorities They
advocated for stronger support for co-operative housing The redevelopment of hostels
to be approached in an integrated and holistic manner and hostels should not be
redeveloped in an isolated manner The subsidy amount for hostels redevelopment and
social facilitation needed to be increased Lastly that hostels redevelopment should
support livelihood strategies and capacity building and training of hostel residents during
the redevelopment process was essential (Urban Sector Network 2003)
The USN proposed a departure from the public sector hostel redevelopment bias of the
Hostel Redevelopment plan (Urban Sector Network 2003)
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme (HRP)
In principal the Hostel Redevelopment Programme supported an unambiguous bias in
favour of public sector hostels (Dyiki 2006) Public sector hostels are those hostels
owned by either provincial or local authorities that offered accommodation to workers
from a range of industries (Thurman 1997) Grey sector hostels (in which the structures
wereare owned by private companies but the land by a provincial or local authority
and private sector hostels) did not form part of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme
(Dyiki 2006) The biggest limitation and challenge of the HRP was in its narrow focus on
solely the conversion of hostels beds (Thurman 1997) The aim of the HRP was to provide
a subsidy allocation that was based per bed but it was criticised as being impractical
and unfeasible and not adequately addressing the issue of housing provision (Dyiki
2006) Dyiki interview (2015) believes that the challenge of the HRP was that it was not
talking to individuals but rather it was a subsidy given to the state to improve the hostel
and the standard of living in the hostel Since most of the public sector hostels were
Page | 64
managed by the municipalities the municipalities received the subsidy and the
residents of the hostels therefore had very little say in how the subsidy could in effect be
used The other challenge was that grey sector and public sector hostels were not part
of the subsidy (Dyiki interview 2015)
The Hostel Redevelopment Programme was perhaps the earliest strategy conceived by
the South African government as a national policy aiming to
Promote habitable and humane conditions in hostel conversions
Ensure the involvement of hostel residents the surroundingneighbouring
community and relevant (publicprivate) authorities and any other entity
affected by the project are involved in the decision-making processes
Facilitate and promote social integration within hostel communities and the
hostels and adjacent communities
Put measures in place to accommodate any persons displaced by the hostel
conversion project
Empower promote economic development and seeks to be development-
oriented
According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment
Programme was largely based on the premise that this programme would make some
provisions for grant funding from the central government towards the conversion or
upgrading of hostels particularly public sector or grey-sector hostels This will be done with
the broad aim of the programme to facilitate and create living conditions for residents
that are humane and hygienic by providing prospects for housing options that are
affordable and sustainable With tenure options for
Rental
Possible ownership for those at the lower income scale
Upon its conception a capital subsidy of R16 000 was initially proposed per family or R4
000 per individual Additionally to be eligible for this programme hostel redevelopment
programmes would need to be
Planned and implemented in a participative and comprehensive manner
with the requirement that interest groups would need to be established
Based on socio-economic studies undertaken to determine and consider the
needs and affordability aspect of those who would be affected (ie stand to
benefit from the project)
Page | 65
Unfailing in ensuring that there is no displacement of residents unless
alternative accommodation is provided
Sustainable with regards to the on-going payments of maintenance and any
other related costs
Purposeful to augment employment opportunities for the hostel residents as
well as the locals in the construction and on-going maintenance of the
project
The broad aim of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme (Mdunyelwa 2015) was to
convert these historically male-occupied spaces which were also subsequently meant
for migrant labourers to family units But it will be done in such a way to able and
capacitate the accommodation of the families of these men In some way but perhaps
not explicitly stated in the Hostel Redevelopment Programme policy brief there is an
element of urbanisation that is implied Therefore it was an attempt to somewhat
encourage the men to relocate their families from their rural home-base (Mdunyelwa
2015)
The shortcomings of the HRP in how it had a restricted focus on hostel beds and
somewhat of an oversight on the complexity of the configuration of hostels saw it being
replaced by the Community Residential Units Programme (CRU) (Pienaar 2010) Dyiki
interview (2015) in my interview with him argued that the CRU Programme unlike the HRP
contains a lot more detail that was perhaps missed in the HRP He further suggested that
the CRU Programme could be considered somewhat of a lsquocost recoveryrsquo strategy by
government to recoup some of the monies spent on these projects As the CRU
programme has a strong rental housing stock component to it (Dyiki interview 2015)
44 The Community Residential Units Programme (CRU Programme)
The Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme has since replaced the National
Hostel Redevelopment Programme At the time of this study there are approximately
2000 public hostels across the country with a vast majority of them still needing to be
afforded some attention and measures to redevelop them (Demacon 2014) According
to the Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the CRU Programme (2006)
the CRU Programme aims to facilitate the provision of secure and stable rental tenure for
lower income persons Furthermore stating that the programme seeks to provide a
framework for addressing the many and varied forms of existing public sector residential
accommodation as the previous approach under the HRP only considered a ldquoper-bedrdquo
Page | 66
approach that proved unfavourable on a number of occasions (CRU Programme Policy
Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme is believed to provide a lsquobetterrsquo suited programme and a coherent
framework to assist in dealing with a vast range of public stock which has for the most
part been indecisively and incomprehensively dealt with (Demacon 2014) The CRU
Programme targets low income individuals as well as households with an average R 3500
monthly income and who have not been able to find suitable accommodation
According to the CRU Programme in the years leading up to 2006 there was an
approximate 4512 of households nationally which fall within the R0-R800 income groups
currently renting and an approximate 4027 falling within the R801 ndash R3200 income
groups (CRU Programme Policy Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme intends to cover the following areas
a) Public hostels that are owned by Provincial Housing Departments and municipalities
b) ldquoGreyrdquo hostels which are hostel that have both a public and private ownership
component due to historical reasons
c) Public housing stock that forms part of the ldquoEnhanced Extended Discount Benefit
Schemerdquo but which cannot be transferred to individual ownership and has to be
managed as rental accommodation by the public owner
d) Post-1994 newly developed public residential accommodation owned by provincial
housing departments and municipalities
e) Existing dysfunctional abandoned andor distressed buildings in inner city or township
areas that have been taken over by a municipality and funded by housing funds
(Department of Human Settlements 2015)
The CRU programme policy document is quite a laborious document In general the CRU
programme seeks to promote and advance the provision of rental options for lower
income groups facilitate communication and participation of residents throughout the
process provide a variety of rental stock and provide secure and stable rental stock This
will be done by what the CRU Programme articulates as providing a realistic funding
programme (Department of Human Settlements 2015)
According to the CRU programme rental stock provided by the programme is to be
owned by either a provincial housing department or a municipality However this has
been a seriously contested position on the part of the individuals and households
affected by the programme who want home ownership (Dyiki interview 2015)
Page | 67
45 Conclusion
There have been a number of projects over the past several years which have in part
articulated the states aspiration to reconfigure the lsquoway of lifersquo in hostels The Hostel
Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units Programme are
considered to have been the leading approaches to reconfiguring hostels within the
countryrsquos broader landscape Whether hostels have or do not have a place in
democratic South Africa is part of what this study is looking to explore
Chapter five introduces the Sethokga hostel conversion project and in principal seeks to
unpack the conceptualisation of the project while reflecting on the findings of the
interviews
Page | 68
The Sethokga hostel conversion project
5 Introduction
Chapter five will examine the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seek to unpack
how the project has been conceptualised Discussing the main components of the
project its main stakeholders the project phases exploring what are its defining
characteristics the broad vision and aim of the project how the project has understood
the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn set to address them and then also
in what way(s) the residents of the hostel have been involved in the project Furthermore
this chapter will examine what the project considers important in terms of gender issues
what have been some limitations of the project while it also considers what the
anticipated impact and benefit of the project is
Lastly and in view of the interviews that were conducted chapter five discusses how the
residents of the hostel and the community of Tembisa and greater Ekurhuleni will know
that the project has been completed and has been successful By and large this chapter
offers testament of the findings from the field work and reviews the rationale of the
Sethokga conversion project To conclude this chapter a collage of diagrams and
images will be presented to provide the reader with greater insight(s) into the Sethokga
hostel conversion project
51 Outline of the main components of the project
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project
There have been a number of stakeholders involved in the Sethokga hostel conversion
project the main stakeholders include
o The Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement (GPDHS)
o LTE Consulting
o The Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
o The ward councillor and various community committees and leaders
o The Sethokga Hostel residents
o The community of Tembisa
Page | 69
The roles of the stakeholders are summarised as follows National government is the key
funder of the Sethokga hostel conversion project the funds are transferred to the GPDHS
who have to then ensure that the costs of the project are managed LTE Consulting is a
consulting company appointed by the GPDHS for the oversight and construction of the
Sethokga hostel conversion project They work in collaboration with the EMM (the local
authority) and its various departments such as the services department the energy
department quality assurance etc However the GPDHS remains the lsquomain decision-
makerrsquo and lsquocustodianrsquo of the project with the lead oversight on the budget and
programmeproject management The project manager Mr Sisa Majikijela is the official
from the GPDHS that is directly responsible for supervision and coordination of the
project The ward councillor and the various community committees leaders facilitate
avenues of communication and engagement between the officials (from province the
EMM and LTE) with the residents of Sethokga and community lsquoAs the eyes and ears on
the groundrsquo (Majikijela interview 2015) ideally the ward councillor and various
community committees leaders have an important role to play in ensuring that the
Sethokga residents and community will be the rightful recipients of the project The
Sethokga hostel residents and broader community have a vested interest in the project
because it stands to affect andor benefit them (Sololo interview2015)
Once the project is completed with the family units fully constructed (ie with furnishings
such as trees plants parking bays and so forth) and the services installed The project will
be handed over to the EMM for on-going administration maintenance and the
collection of rentals (Shibambo interview 2015) The Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlement in collaboration with the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and LTE
Consulting play a key role as facilitates of the conversion of Sethokga hostel into family
units (Majikijela interview 2015)
522 Project phases
The data regarding the project phases was easily accessible and generously provided by
the consulting resident engineer and the architect providing me with a market analysis
study and a few other key documents The development concept of the hostel
conversion project divides the project into three phases and further subdivides each of
the phases into two phases phases A and B (Demacon 2014)
Initial studies (ie pre-feasibility studies) were done in 2008 but the demolition of the first
four blocks of the hostel demolished for the current phase 1A only took place in August of
2011 and it was anticipated that phase 1A would be completed and handed over to the
Page | 70
municipality by the end of 2014 but this did not happen (Majikijela interview 2015) At the
time of conducting fieldwork between the months of August and September 2015 it was
said that phase 1A was near completion with just the landscaping parking and water
provision left to completed (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
Phase 1A of the project was meant to bring to completion a total of 240 units
accommodating 1 194 people to provide 69 parking bays (one per four units) a total of
54 one bedroom units 117 two bedroom units and 69 three bedroom units at an average
unit size of 324m2 477m2 and 588m2 for the one two and three bedrooms respectively
(Demacon 2014) However only a total of 222 units have been built and this shortfall was
largely attributed to the underlying dolomite geological conditions of the site (Bako and
Shibambo interview 2015)
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
The Sethokga hostel conversion project has been administered under the CRU
programme and forms part of a national agenda to convert hostels into family units
(Dyiki interview 2015) The target group under the CRU programme is individuals and
households earning between R800 and R3 500 per month who are able to enter what the
CRU programme has termed the lsquoformal private rental and social housing marketrsquo
(Demacon 2014)
The new residential units (the family units) are situated on ervan 128 and 5729 of the
Sethokga complex within the administrative jurisdiction of the Kempton Park Customer
Care Area (CCA) which is the administrative body conducting oversight of development
and town planning affairs for the Tembisa and Kempton Park areas (Demacon 2014)
The family units are three storey walk-ups and appear somewhat spacious and far more
appealing than the hostel structures The CRU proposes that bachelorsone bedroom
units of 20m2 to 35m2 should be allocated at a monthly rental of R270 ndash R450 a two
bedroom unit of 35m2-45m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R450 to R850 and
that a three bedroom unit of 45m2-80m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R850 ndash
R1650 Rentals have been and remain a contestation in a number of hostel conversion
projects across the country and Sethokga is no different According to the economic
representative for the ward Sololo interview (2015) the residents of Sethokga hostel are
contesting that they want to pay R150 for a one bedroom unit R200 for a two bedroom
unit and R300 for a three bedroom unit
According to the principles of the CRU programme the ownership of the rental housing
stock is to be reserved by either the Gauteng Provincial Department of Human
Page | 71
Settlement (GPDHS) or the EMM The ownership of the family units can be transferred by
the GPDHS to the EMM in line with the Housing Act no right(s) of ownership can be
transferred to tenants (Pienaar 2010)
The process of the Sethokga hostel conversion has on an administrative and government
support level been facilitated through a grant allocation from national government to
province (GPDHS) This grant has made provisions for pre-feasibility studies
socialcommunity facilitation the relocationreallocation of some residents (within the
hostel or to alternative sites to make way for demolition and construction of phase 1A)
and the consideration and compensation of construction costs and professional fees
(Majikijela interview 2015) The allocation of the units determining rental structures
applying indigent relief measures where necessary rental collection and maintenance
as well as the management of the family units are factors determined by the GPDHS and
the EMM cooperatively (Sololo interview 2015) The hostel residents are then at some
level consulted and lsquoencouragedrsquo to participate in this regard (Dyiki interview 2015)
Seemingly throughout project implementation the stakeholders have been kept informed
of the status and progress of the project With respect to notifying the hostel residents and
general public notices are placed in and around the hostel to inform them of meetings
and the ward councillorrsquos office take the lead on this (Mthethwa interview 2015)
There have been a number of communitypublic meetings that have taken place as the
project has progressed From the fieldwork I was not able to draw on precisely how many
meetings had taken place since or precisely when the meetings took place or what was
discussed in each of those meetings Generally the ward councillor said at least once a
month a consultative and progress report meeting would take place between the
various stakeholders where officials would engage the hostel residents and general
public
According to Majikijela interview (2015) the ward councillor and the economic rep the
main area of involvement on the part of the hostel residents has been in providing
labour A small percentage of the residents have been involved in the construction-work
and some of the clerical work on the project Their involvement in discussions on the
project is said to often be arbitrarily halted by political interference (Sololo interview
2015) For instance Bako interview (2015) the architect recalled that on the design of the
family units Liefa Architects did not talk to the end user ie the residents to ask them
what they wanted Instead a design which was informed by other examples of similar
projects was presented to the residents of Sethokga and the general public (Bako
interview 2015) ldquoThe design of the hostel was not lsquoexclusiversquo to Sethokga and its contextrdquo
(Bako interview 2015)
Page | 72
In relation to the size of the hostel and its residents only a very small percentage of the
hostel residents have been employed in the project the December 2013 January 2014
labour records reported the following
Table 1
Total workforce 66
Females 7
Males 59
Youth 28
Adults 38
Semi-skilled 20
Skilled 22
Disabled 0
General workers 24
Source LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor report
I was fortunate to have attended one of the community meetings that were held at an
old community hall within the vicinity of the hostel This meeting took place on a
Saturday the 15th of August 2015 and it was quite the experience There was a relatively
strong police presence at the meeting The police kept watch and managed the
activities inside and outside the community hall As there were concerns that the
proceedings might get out of hand and a possible tussle between those in attendance
might arise The meeting was chaired by the ward councillor and aside from the residents
of Sethokga in attendance was one official from the GPDHS an official from the EMM
community leaders and ANC committee members
There was an obvious and overwhelming male presence in the meeting tempers ran
high and there was an observable resistance from the residents of Sethokga to the
presence of the three females in the meeting This included me and two female
committee members Several times the meeting was disrupted by shouts and echoes of
discontentment questioning what women were doing at a meeting for men lsquordquothey have
no place here they do not even live hererdquo were the words of some of the men Our
presence seemed to really infuriate some of the men This was similar to what Ramphele
(1993) Segal (1991) Thurman (1997) and Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) observed in
their work and suggested that even now and within the context of Sethokga that the
men in the hostel are still quite at odds with having women as a part of their lsquogathering of
Page | 73
menrsquo and possibly even living among them The demeanour of some of the men in this
meeting suggested that they found the presence and role of women in these meetings
unneeded It was evident that these men had become far too accustomed to living
lsquoalonersquo as men Ramphele (1993) noted that the idea of an unambiguous constant and
unrestricted presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a serious point
of contention for some of men Some men expressed unwillingness while others a
struggle to comprehend or endorse this change that seemed overly unfamiliar and
challenging to come to grips with (Ramphele 1993) From my observation in this meeting
the same seems to hold true for Sethokga
The purpose of the meeting was to consult the hostel residents who were identified to be
the first recipients beneficiaries of the allocating of family units to consult them on issues
of final rental proposals allocation processes and status of the project The invitation for
this meeting was apparently only extended to those particular individuals but
subsequently the meeting was taken over by those who had objections to the process of
allocation rentals and why the meeting sought to exclude them and divide the residents
Generally the meeting was unruly and the ward councillor as well as the community
leaders and committee members struggled to manage the crowd and the rampant
tempers in the room
The agenda for the meeting is provided below to provide the reader with some context
and outline of the intension of the meeting Unfortunately tempers ran especially high in
this meeting and in my opinion none of the items on the agenda were successfully
addressed
Page | 74
Figure 8 August 15 community meeting agenda
Source Sethokga Community meeting 2015
521 Broad vision and aim of the project
The vision and aim of the project was described by the key informants who to some
extent unanimously used the following key words integration sustainability community
participation to improve peoplersquos lives restoring honour addressing the ills of hostel life
and bringing families into a safe and secure environment The housing officer for me
captured well the overall sentiments of the key informants when he said ldquowe are
surrounded and have so many companies in Tembisa so clearly you will find letrsquos say a
white guy working in the area but then they travel to Kempton Park or some other area
outside Tembisa and that is where they live So it would be nice to see him living in
Sethokga The project is about integration and not just integrating the residents of
Page | 75
Sethokga to the rest of the township but other ways of integration like racial integration
That is what I want to seerdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015)
Additionally the broad vision and aim of the hostel conversion project is to instil a culture
of payment into not just the hostel but the broader community ldquoPeople cannot just keep
wanting everything for free government cannot afford itrdquo The interviewees that
expressed this position were Majikijela Sololo Mthethwa Dyiki Bako and Shibambo
Seemingly under the CRU programme the project would seek to influence and instil this
culture of payment through the rental housing stock focus of the programme That
largely seeks to promote government owned and managed rental housing stock a
departure from the lsquofreersquo housing approach (Bako interview 2015)
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga development
Source Liefa Architects 2015
Phase 1B Phase 2B Phase 3B
Phase 1A Phase 2A
Phase 3A
Page | 76
What was surprising to me was that the family units are not intended to be occupied by
current residents only The idea is that some of the current residents would live elsewhere
and when this question was posed to the official from the GPDHS Majikijelarsquos interview
(2015) response was that the hostel residents who did not qualify in terms of the required
criteria for the renting of the units would be allocated RDPs in the neighbouring area of
Esselen Park but he could not provide clarity as to how and when this would happen
The vision of Sethokga that can be seen from the plan provided below is a reconfigured
locality Rehabilitated single-sex compounds into self contained family units furnished
with child care facilities park(s) garden(s) a community centre recreation facilities and
parking areas
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn
set out to address those needs and challenges
Although the CRU Programme only sets particular administrative operational and
project facilitation guidelines Arguably these guidelines do in some respect address
a number of the ills associated with hostels such as the issue of overcrowding lack of
privacy and poor living conditions (Pienaar 2010) Within Sethokga there are
challenges of tribalism high prevalence of HIV drug abuse alcohol abuse
criminality overcrowding lack of privacy possible health hazards a lack of ablution
facilities The hostel being unsafe for women (especially those who are staying in the
hostel illegally) was identified and shared by the key informants as some of the major
challenges confronting the hostel This view was shared by the ward councillor the
housing officer from the EMM the project manager from the GPDHS the consulting
engineer and the wardrsquos economic representative
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi the issue of tribalism occurred
as a result of what he recalls as a defining political shift ldquoafter the release of Mandela
and when they started preaching lsquothis thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions
happened according to who was Zulu or Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Here the ward councillor explains what he saw as
some of the factors that led to what is currently the strong predominance of Pedi and
Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel suggesting that
ldquoThey were mixed here when they started talking about negotiations that
there must be elections and then the IFP (Inkatha Freedom Party) was
rejecting that and that had nothing to do with membership it was a situation
of the warlords the Zulursquos terrorizing the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa
Page | 77
and standing with the white man The Zulursquos did not like that so that is where
the Zulu and Xhosa divide started and that is when you found that in
Sethokga it became predominantly more Xhosa there was fighting and war
the Zulursquos were chasing people out of their territory at the other hostels The
Xhosarsquos ran to Sethokga There was fighting everywhere even here in
Sethokga and all over the Pedis Vendas Tsongarsquos they all ran away from
those hostels where they were being chased out and they came hererdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
It was unclear as to the extent to which the project dealt with any of these
challenges and how or if they were factored into the project The project seems to
have a general lsquobest practicersquo approach to hostel conversion irrespective of the
circumstance of a particular hostel
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project
ldquoThe political volatility of the project poses an enormous threat to the successful
allocationletting of the family unitsrdquo (Majikijela interview 2015) On the part of the
key informants their continued inability to answer the perhaps not so simple question
of what would happen to those who could not afford the monthly rental of the family
units This suggested that the issue of rentals has remained a grey area even as the
project heads towards project completion ldquoWe will worry about that when we get
thererdquo was the brisk response to my inquiry on this matter Similar to what was
observed by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in the City Deep Redevelopment
project Sethokga faces a similar challenge
Certainly public community participation in any context is a complex and at times a
contentious exercise (Mdunyelwa 2015) I remain hesitant whether the Sethokga
hostel conversion project has been able to lsquotrulyrsquo engage residents and the broader
community in a transparent and reciprocal manner Seemingly affordability will be
the determining factor of who will be able to rent a unit To those who cannot afford
it stands to be seen what remedy will be extended to them
Moreover the following factors were cited as some of the limitations of the project
the lack of transparency political interference an inadequate dissemination of
information to residentscommunity and the projects failure to respond to what the
solution(s) will be for lsquonon-qualifyingrsquo residents who cannot afford the monthly rentals
Page | 78
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful
I wanted to find out from the key informants particularly those who have been
directly involved in the conversion project what for them would constitute a
successful project and how from their point of view the residents and the greater
community would know that the project is completed and has been
successfulunsuccessful Overall the leading response was that a project would be
successful when the family units are occupied Some of the interviewees added that
the process of allocating the units and resolving the myriad of issues are most
certainly likely to cause further delays and will require intricate resolution (ie peoplersquos
unwillingness and otherrsquos inability to pay tension and opposition to paying rentals
opening the letting to tenants who are not hostel residents and so forth)
In summary the thoughts shared by the housing office at the EMM and the wardrsquos
economic representative capture in essence the general position held by every one
of the key informants
ldquoFor me a complete project will be the units functioning on their own and then
people will be told during a public meeting We also need to involve the mayor the
MECs and the media People will be told that it is finished and this is what is going to
happenrdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015) ldquoAfter it has been completed I want to see 80
percent of the people who have been staying in the hostel still residing in the hostel
It must not just be open to whomever There are people as far as Johannesburg who
want to stay here because they see it being comfortable and nice forgetting we are
looking to improve the lives of the current hostel dwellers There are even those in the
township who think that people of the hostel cannot pay so this is not for themrdquo
(Sololo interview 2015)
Page | 79
53 Visual narrative of the family units
531 Architectural designsplans
The design of the family units is what the architect referred to as a multi-storey approach
ldquoThe three storey walk-ups address the need for housing much better than an RDP wouldrdquo
(Bako interview 2015) They have an urban apartment-like feel about them but the
mundane (uniform) paintwork gives them a distinct government provided social housing feel
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development plan
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 80
Figure 12 Architects Section E - E
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 11 Architects Section F ndash F
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 13 South Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 81
Figure 14 North Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 15 East Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 16 West Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 82
532 The project site of family units
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site
View of the site of the family units from one of
the hostel blocks situated adjacent to the
construction site across the street
Construction of the family units
commenced in August of 2011
Site notice placed at the entrance of the
family units construction site
The Sethokga community hall situated at
the entrance to the family units
construction site and adjacent to the
council offices
Page | 83
For the most partthe construction of the
family units is nearing completetion
Walking through the site personally I felt that
the family units had a somewhat prominent
RDP lsquolookrsquo about them
Ground floor view
The entrance into the construction site of the
family units and the site office which is
situtated within the vicinity of the site
Page | 84
533 Inside the Family units
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units
Doorway into one of the three bedroom
family units which leads into an open plan
dining and kitchen area
Each unit has its own dining sitting and
kitchen area
The construction site is lsquopolicedrsquo by the Red
Ants (a private security company)around the
clock and also a private security company
Some of the security members seen on site
they insisted I take a picture of them to
include in this study
Page | 85
Built-in sink and geyser
The family
units offer a number of distinct qualities that
the hostel clearly does not have which
include privacy and a dignified living
environmentspace
Each unit has its bathroom with a built-in
toilet bath and shower
Shower
Separate and additional toilet as part of the
three bedroom family units
The diningsitting area and two adjacent
bedrooms
Page | 86
The site of the family units is being guarded by a private security company and members
of the Red Ants (a private security company) When asked about this the official (the
project manager overseeing the Sethokga hostel conversion project) from the GPDHS
said that this was necessary to ensure that no unauthorised occupations take place This
was also to guard against any possible vandalism or the looting of materialsequipment
or the site office (Majikijela interview 2015)
54 Summary of main themes and findings
This study had a number of themes which resonate with the case study The localised
context of Sethokga hostel offered great insights into the current state of hostels as
spaces and places that still largely exist within a context of volatility poor living conditions
and complex socio-economic challenges (Thurman 1997) The historic exploits on hostels
revealed and I suppose confirmed that the hostel system was established supported and
perpetuated by methodical policy and controls to discourage the permanent settlement
of Africans in urban areas or any intention of relocating their family to urban areas (Segal
1991) Furthermore within the contemporary South African context this has posed a
number of challenges and has been a longstanding reality of a number of hostel dwellers
as observed in the work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010)
The view from one of the family units (a ground
floor three bedroom unit) is onto the ward
councillorrsquos offices and the hostel in the
distance
One of the three bedrooms in the family
units
Page | 87
Sethokga hostel is also one of many hostels that exist within a historically-laden context
The strong prominence of Pedi and Xhosa native speaking men in some respect also
speaks to the events of circular migration that are still a lived-reality of the men of
Sethokga This according to the ward councillor has meant that the men have had to
maintain ties with their families in the Eastern Cape and Limpopo while most of them live
in Sethokga away from their families (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) In terms of gender
issues the aspect of men and housing the hostel conversion project does not adopt a
particular stand on this Seemingly the project makes no effort to appreciate the
apparent rural location of the wives partners children and families of a vast majority of
the men in Sethokga The idea is that anyone who is able to afford the monthly rental of
the family units can sign a lease agreement and rent a unit However this presents a
number of issues and leaves a lot unaccounted for and unanswered ie will the families
of the men in the hostels make a transition to join them in the family units Is this even a
possibility for them what impact would this have on the already stretched social
amenities in the area Arguably in the case of Sethokga this oversight has been a serious
area of contention and has amplified the political volatility of the project
The heavy-handedness of the hostel system cunningly imposed a sense of no escape
yet quite interestingly the later unwillingness to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have their
hostel converted into family units (Thurman 1997)
Among the key findings of the research report is that the lsquorental onlyrsquo tenure option and
approach to the hostel conversion project was the biggest challenge and one of the
most critical points of contention (Pienaar 2010) On the one hand the hostel residents
are arguing that they cannot afford the proposed rentals while on the other hand
officials are of the opinion that this is in fact untrue and not wholly representative of the
attitude(s) of all the hostel residents Thus a supposed unwillingness to pay and a culture
of entitlement was cited by the key informants as the underlying state of affairs and one
that posed the biggest threat to the project and in particular how the family units would
be allocated
Although the project is for the most part about converting Sethokga hostel into family
units in principal it is also about redress integration improving the living conditions of
Sethokga residents reconfiguring the mental and physical landscape of hostels in
contemporary South Africa and introducing children and women into the hostel
Integration was repeatedly cited by the key informants as the main imperative of the
study Political interference and the very particular sensitivities around political allegiance
Page | 88
(keeping in the mind the local elections are fast approaching) are factors that were
cited would cause the greatest difficulty in the allocation of the family units
54 Conclusion
Undoubtedly the Sethokga hostel conversion project has a number of components and
features to it that are complex in part ambiguous and would require further and more
detailed study Seemingly the CRU programme is a lsquodeparturersquo from the Hostel
Redevelopment Programme In part it offers prospects to facilitate the provision of
affordable rental tenure for those earning below R3500 while seeking to promote the
integration of publicsocial housing into the broader housing market Under the
administration of the CRU programme one of the leading aims is to facilitate the creation
of sustainable public housing assets (Pienaar 2010) However the CRU programme has
been criticised as a framework that is largely operating in a policy environment that is
hostile elaborate and not speaking to the needs of the people on the ground
Furthermore many see it as solely a hostel upgrading policy viewed often to be done
impromptu in response to local pressures (Pienaar 2010) To paraphrase Pienaar (2010)
the vagueness regarding the roles and responsibilities of the respective provincial
department of human settlement and municipalities has not provided much confidence
in hostel conversion projects
Chapter five has examined the Sethokga hostel conversion project and attempted to
unpack how the project has been conceptualised This chapter has identified and
outlined the main components of the project its main stakeholders and what has been
their role in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Discussed were the project phases a
number of critical elements such as how the project has understood the needs and
challenges of the hostel residents In addition to this chapter five outlined the way(s) in
which the residents have been involved in the project if the project considered anything
important in terms of gender issues and if what have these been factored into the
project By and large chapter five drew extensively on the findings of the fieldwork and
made an effort to narrate some of the insights and perspectives shared by the key
informants To conclude the chapter a collage of diagrams and images were presented
to offer the reader a visual narrative of the site of the family units
Page | 89
Concluding chapter
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoWhat does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
61 Review and reflections
This research report consisted of six chapters chapter one introduced the study
chapter two provided the theoretical backdrop of the study chapter three
introduced the study area (Sethokga hostel) chapter four discussed the evolution of
hostel redevelopment conversion and what has been the states approach to hostel
conversion and chapter five examined the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project
In chapter one the main point of discussion was the research question outlining the
aim and objectives of the study and the research methodology
Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project been conceptualised
in how the project has been conceptualised does it address the stigma of hostel life
and it what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What informed the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail what is the broad aim and vision
of the project what is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
Page | 90
In chapter one it was also argued that this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects had somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore that there needed to be more inquiry and
study conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel
conversion projects
The studyrsquos theoretical backdrop was discussed in chapter two The aim of this was to
contextualise the term hostels as to clearly illustrate what is meant by it In addition
to drawing on particular strands of literature concepts ideas and arguments that
resonated with the study Chapter two argued that the historically the landscape of
hostels has by and large been complex at times perplexing and highly contentious
Chapter three introduced Sethokga hostel It elaborated on the locality of the hostel
and its local as well as municipal context A visual narrative of the hostel was also
provided and this captured the current state of the hostel and the conditions in which
its residents endure It was established that ironically the conditions in the hostel are
not much different to many of the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg
The hostel was badly designed poorly built and is suffering years of neglect it is in
appalling and overcrowded condition
Chapter four described the evolution of hostel redevelopment conversion in the
country and what has been the states approach to hostel conversion post-1994 This
chapter discussed in some detail the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme Arguing that these programmes have to
date been the lsquoforerunnersrsquo of the statersquos approach to addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo
While in chapter five the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
was examined Chapter five was the crux of this research report The discussions in the
chapters before it set up the groundwork for a critical exploration of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project and for unpacking the research question
Chapter six concludes this study and seeks to answer the question ldquoso what does this
mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo Since this
report was conducted as part of the requirements for the partial fulfilment of an
Urban and Regional Planning honours qualification It is important to address the ldquoso
what for plannersrsquo question and the value that this report stands to offer to the
Page | 91
planning profession Firstly let us reflect on what have been some of the limitations of
the study
62 Limitations of the study
For the most part this study had a wealth of information and sources to draw from
The insights and wisdom provided by the key informants were invaluable their
willingness and enthusiasm to participate in this study was not something I had
anticipated but I remain truly grateful
Due to certain constraints more especially time constraints and the particular scope
focus of the research report this posed some limitations to the study In only
interviewing and engaging with officials and not with the residents of Sethokga the
voices opinions and views of the officials told only one side of a many-sided story
How the project affects and has affected the residents Is this something they want
support and for those who do not what are some of their reasons for contention Is
circular migration still as prominent a feature within the current context of Sethokga
What is the present-day nature of household configurations in the hostels (is the duty
of the older men still to order the actions of the younger men ie the cleaning and up
keeping of the communal area and other household duties) what for the residents
of Sethokga would constitute a successful project
Even as this study concludes the side of the hostel residents remains largely untold
and unreported Furthermore the supposed apathy on the part of the hostel residents
and the views expressed by the key informants that family units offer the most ideal
and best alternative to the residents of Sethokga could not be explored and
interrogated further given the limitations of the scope of the study
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners
Within contemporary South Africa there have certainly been a vast number of
conflicting views held regarding what should be the role and future of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Although academics policy makers bureaucrats developers and
the general public have usually been unable to reach longstanding middle-ground
on what should be done about hostels One of the more widely held views is that
hostels certainly present a real challenge but also an opportunity For government
Page | 92
developers non-government organisations (NGOs) built environment practitioners
and needless to say the residents of hostels themselves (Thurman 1997)
Planners are frequently cast in the role of performing a balancing act (Campbell
2006) As a result the adaptability of the planning profession as a coherent and
impartial discipline has over the years become rather topical subjects (Campbell
2006) This has inevitably continued to require new and innovative ways of lsquoseeingrsquo
lsquocomprehendingrsquo and lsquodoingrsquo things in order to shape and re-shape an inherently
divergent and historic-laden urban landscape (Jupp and Inch 2012) In the midst of
the shifts in the traditional conception and role of the planning profession as a merely
procedural and administrative activity (Harrison and Kahn 2002) planning is still to a
great extent closely tied to government structures (Cornwall 2002) Therefore within
this particular context of government driven intervention urban planning
professionals stand to be instrumental facilitators of development and offer essential
expertise and tools towards addressing some of the challenges within our urban
landscape (Albert and Kramsch 1999)
This study observed a range of intertwined urban dynamics ie around housing socio-
economic distress a wavering political climate and the need to be more
environmentally conscientious This necessitates focused attention and much
consideration as the political economic social and environmental junctures in which
planning has come to operate has meant that the profession has become
susceptible to external pressures scrutiny and influence (Campbell and Marshall
2002)
64 Conclusion
South Africa has for a number of years into democracy been at a critical time of
limited housing supply and a desperate need for housing (Khan and Thurman 2001)
(Pienaar
2010) Planners have an important role to play in facilitating coordinating and
effecting the reconfiguration of the urban landscape towards improving the setting
of inherently socio-economically ailing spaces such as hostels (Jupp and Inch 2012)
Hostels have largely remained as spaces that have continued to perpetuate
underdevelopment inequality and disempowerment (Khan and Thurman 2001) If
family units are to wholly address the stigma of hostel life and the convoluted nature
Page | 93
of hostels to alter the landscape of hostels and define a novel future for hostels and
their residents It is certain that this will require decisive action collaborative efforts
and the wisdom of retrospection
Page | 94
List of references
African National Congress 1994 The Reconstruction and Development Programme A
policy framework ANC Johannesburg
African National Congress (2003) Briefing note 5 Housing
httpwwwancorgzaelections2004briefingshousingpdf
Albert A and Kramsch O (1999) Space Inequality and Difference lsquoRadical Turns
and lsquoCultural Termsrdquo European Planning Studies 7(1) 77 ndash 79
Bandyopadhyay S and Green E (2008) Nation-building and Conflict in Modern
Africa The Suntory Centre
Barnett C (1999) Broadcasting the Rainbow Nation Media Democracy and Nation-
building in South Africa Editorial Board of Antipode 31 (3) 274-303
Benit-Gbaffou C and Mathoho M (2010) A case study of participation in the City
Deep Hostel Redevelopment Project Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Bonner P and Nieftagodien N (2012) Ekurhuleni the making of an urban region
Wits University Press
Campbell H and Marshall R (2002) Values and professional identities in planning
practice in Allmendinger R And Tewdwr-Jones M (eds) Planning futures new
directions for planning theory London Routledge
Castles S and M J (Millerl (2008) The Age of Migration International Population
Movements in the Modern World New York The Guilford Press
Charlton S et al (2014) From Housing to Human Settlement Evolving Perspectives
South African Cities Network
Chipkin I and Meny-Gibert S (2011) Why the Past matters Histories of the Public
Service in South Africa PARI Short Essays number 1 Johannesburg PARI
Collinson M A and K Adazu (2006) The INDEPTH Network A demographic resource
on migration and urbanisation in Africa and Asia Views on Migration in Sub-Saharan
Africa Proceedings of an African Migration Alliance Workshop C Cross D
Gelderblom N Roux and J Mafukidze Cape Town HSRC Press 159- 172
Page | 95
Collinson M A (2006) Health Impacts of Social Transition A study of Female
Temporary Migration and its impact on Child Mortality in Rural South Africa A
dissertation submitted to the School of Public Health University of the Witwatersrand
in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master in Science in the branch of
Medicine
Cornwall A (2002) Making Spaces Changing Places Situating Participation in
Development Institute of Development Studies IDS Working Paper 170
Creswell J W (2009) Research Design Qualitative Quantitative and Mixed Methods
Approaches 3rd Edition Los Angeles Sage Publications Inc
Demacon 2014 Sethokga hostels mixed typology market analysis market research
Findings and recommendations
Department of Human Settlements Republic of South Africa Programmes and
Subsidies document assessed on 7 July 2015 from
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentspublicationshuman_settlement
s_programmes_and_subsidiespdf
Department of Social Development Republic of South Africa White Paper on
Families in South Africa 2012
Dyiki M (2006) City of Cape Town Integrating Families Hostels to Homes
Redevelopment Programme Presentation
httpswwwwesterncapegovzatext200652006_hostels_presentation-_dyikipdf
Fritz V and Menocal A R (2007) Understanding State-Building from a Political
Economy Perspective An Analytical and Conceptual Paper on Processes
Embedded Tensions and Lessons for International Engagement Report for DFIDrsquos
Effective and Fragile States Teams Overseas Development Institute
Greenberg S and Mathoho M (2010) ldquoConceptual Framework on Public
Participation and Developmentrdquo Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Page | 96
Grieger L et al (2013) Moving Out and Moving In Evidence of Short-Term Household
Change in South Africa from the National Income Dynamics Study
Goldblatt B amp Meintjes S (1996) Gender and the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission a submission to the TRC May
Harrison P And Kahn M (2002) The ambiguities of change the case of the planning
profession in the province of KwaZulu-Natal South Africa in Thornley A and Rydin Y
(eds) Planning in the global era Aldershot Ashgate
Jupp E and Inch A (2012) Planning as a profession in uncertain times Town Planning
Review Vol 83 No 5
Khan F and Thurman S (2001) Setting the Stage Current Housing Policy and
Debate in South Africa Isandla Institute
Liefa Consulting (2015) Maps diagrams source
LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor
report
Mapetla M M (2005) Aspects of urban housing for women and men in Southern
Africa Roma Lesotho National University of Lesotho
Marshall M N (1996) Sampling for qualitative research Family Practice Oxford
University Press
Mosoetsa S (2011) Eating from one pot the dynamics of survival in poor South
African households Johannesburg Wits University Press
Mdunyelwa M L (2015) Public Participation in Hostel Redevelopment Programs in
Nyanga and Langa Dissertation presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in
the Faculty of Arts and Social Science at Stellenbosch University
National Housing Report (2009) -
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentsnational_housing_20092_Techn
ical_General_Guidelines
Netshitenzhe J (2011) A Developmental State South Africarsquos developmental
Capacity UCT Summer School Mapungubwe Institute for Strategic Reflection
Page | 97
Peoples Housing Programme httpwwwjoburg-
archivecozacity_visionannualreport2002-03chapter10pdf
Pienaar J S and Cloete C E (2005) Hostel Conversion as Social Housing in South
Africa Funding Regime VS Real Needs Case Study of the Sethokga Hostel Conversion
Project Pacific Rim Real Estate Society (PRRES)
Pienaar J (2010) Community Residential Units key elements application implications
for Metros Municipal Leadership Housing Forum0
Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the Community Residential Units
Programme 2006
httpwwwgovzaabout-governmentgovernment-programmescommunity-
residential-unit-cru-programme
Ramphele M (1993) A Bed Called Home Life in the Migrant Labour Hostels of Cape
Town Ohio Ohio University Press
Segal L (1991) The Human Face of Violence Hostel dwellers speak In The Journal of
Southern African Studies Vol 18 No 1
SJN Development Planning Consultants (2000) Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial
Development Framework
South African Department of Housing 2008 Community Residential Programme
httpwwwhousinggovzaContentCRUHomehtm
South African Local Government Association
httpwwwsalgaorgzaappwebrootassetsfilesGuidelines20for20Municipalities
Flyer20rental20housing20NMApdf
South African Yearbook 20122013
httpwwwsouthafricanewyorknetconsulateYearbook2020131320Human20S
ettlemp
Statistics South Africa Census (2001) Concepts and Definitions Report
httpswwwStatistics+South+Africa+Census+(2001)+Concepts+and+Definitions+Repo
rt+03-02-26+Version
Thurman S (1997) Umzamo improving hostel dwellersrsquo accommodation in South
Africa Environment and Urbanisation Vol 9 No 2
Page | 98
Urban Sector Network Final Report August 2000 ndash April 2003 Hostel Redevelopment
httppdfusaidgovpdf_docsPdaby792pdf
Van der Berg S (2010) Current poverty and income distribution in the context of
South African history Stellenbosch Economic Working Papers 2210
Von Holdt K (2010) Nationalism Bureaucracy and Developmental State The South
African Case South African Review of Sociology Volume 41 Number 1
Watt A (2012) Essentials of project management
httpopentextbccaprojectmanagement
Ziehl S C (2001) Documenting Changing Family Patterns in South Africa Are Census
Data of any Value African Sociological Review 5(2)
Interviews with key informants
Shibambo Vincent Resident Engineer LTE Consulting Interview 14thAugust 2015
(Sethokga family units project site)
Mthethwa Jabu Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Housing Officer Interview 17
August 2015 (Ekurhuleni Kempton Park Housing Offices)
Mohlapamaswi Ward Councillor ANC Tembisa Ward 4 Interview 18 August 2015
(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers
Sololo Lufefe Ward 4 Economic Development Representative Interview 18 August
2015(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers)
Majikijela Sisa Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlements Sethokga
Hostel Conversion Project Manager Interview 19 August 2015 (Sethokga family units
project site boardroom)
Dyiki Malibongwe Housing Development Agency Official 7 September 2015
(Housing Development Agency head office Killarney Johannesburg)
Bako Simba Liefa Architects Interview 9 September (LTE House Sunninghill
Johannesburg)
Page | 6
This study emanates as a result of two main contributing factors the first being
somewhat retrospective and the second being of academic interest and
inquisitiveness Both will hopefully contribute to a study that will make a meaningful
contribution to broader scholarly literature and learning
I grew up living fairly close to a hostel I had walked past this particular hostel
(Sethokga) on numerous occasions in fact more times than I can recall but I had
never set foot in a hostel until quite recently It was not because I was told not to go
into the hostel or cautioned not to mingle with those residing in the hostel but there
was always this strange feeling of unease and uncertainty that presented itself in the
lofty dim grungy facade of this place There was in myself however I curiousness
about the hostel not just because of how it looked that is the extensive and obvious
outward appearance of wear and tear but the ingenuous wondering of how this
place functioned Who lived there how did they live there and so I rather naively
wondered why anyone would chose to live lsquoin that placersquo What was also always
curious was how the hostel seemed to be remote from the township which
surrounded it
Some ten years later after many years that this hostel had been out of sight and for
the most part out of mind I was in the neighbourhood and noticed these more
appealing apartment-like structures that appeared to be replacing the old structures
and with a great deal of inquisitiveness and some courage I set to inquire on this The
abstract below confers some of my own sentiments that of the few published studies
on hostels most of the focus has been on hostels in Johannesburg and Cape Town
(Dyiki interview 2015) Hence the fact that the case study for this study was situated
in an area that is quite literally and somewhat figuratively lsquoclose to homersquo provided
personal eagerness and allure about this study and an opportunity to confront this
oversight
ldquo by an accident of research the hostels in Cape Town have been under a far
more intense sociological gaze than those on the East Rand Given the sudden
prominence of the inner city hostels in the Transvaal war we have been forced to
recognise and attempt to overcome this oversight of the few published studies
on the hostels in the Transvaal most focus on Johannesburg and are essentially
descriptiverdquo (Segal 19915)
Page | 7
While I have always been curious about where and how people live and their
experiences and reality in the places they reside hostels have always intrigued me
This particular focus on hostels also emanates as a result of a particular frustration
within my standing as a scholar with what has continually appeared to me that is to
be this sort of overstretched overemphasis and preoccupation by our post-1994
government with shanty towns This is not to say that I think shanty towns are not a
significant area of concern characterised by some of the worst living conditions and
rightfully so deserve concerted attention and decisive remedial measures According
to Segal (1991) much like hostel dwellers the residents of shantyrsquos form part of the
South African populace who have been amongst the most severely exploited and
disadvantaged (Segal 1991)
In focusing on hostels as a euphemism for single-sex labour compounds one is
confronted with a similarly momentous and multifaceted circumstance As hostels
were and largely still continue to be very much part of the housing crisis in the country
and so this research report will endeavour to cast some light on hostels to
contextualise hostels the hostel conversion approach and the associated stigma of
hostel live within a contemporary South African context
Page | 8
Chapter one Introductory chapter15
1 Introduction15
11 Background to the study17
12 Rationale18
13 Problem statement18
14 Research question and sub-questions19
15 Significance of the study19
16 Aim and objectives of the research20
17 Research methodology20
171 Type of research20
172 What kind of information is needed22
173 Collecting data22
174 Sampling22
175 Ethical considerations23
18 Conclusion24
Chapter two Theoretical backdrop25
2 Introduction25
21 Contextualising hostels26
22 Key concepts theories ideas and arguments27
221 The historic model of hostels the conceptualisation of the hostel system28
222 Migration and the notion of migrant labour labourers as conceived under the
hostel system29
223 The notion of bedhold31
Page | 9
224 The stigma of hostel life31
225 Family versus household configurations32
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing33
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy35
228The role and significance of communitypublic participation in hostel conversion
projects35
23 Conclusion38
Chapter three Introducing Sethokga hostel39
3 Introduction39
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)39
311 Geographic description of the study area41
312 Locality44
313 Local and municipal context45
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel50
321 Built formArchitecture50
322 Municipal services54
323 The adjoining area55
33 Conclusion56
Chapter four The states approach to hostel conversion58
4 Introduction58
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach58
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach59
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme59
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process60
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing61
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised
Housing61
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country62
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme63
44 The Community Residential Units Programme65
45 Conclusion67
Chapter five The Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project68
5 Introduction68
Page | 10
51 Outline of the main components of the project68
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project68
512 Project phases69
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project70
521 Broad vision and aim of the project74
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and
in turn set to address those needs and challenges76
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project77
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful78
53 Visual narrative of the site of the family units79
531Architectural designsplans79
532 The project site of the family units82
533 Inside the family units84
53 Summary of main themes and findings86
54 Conclusion88
Chapter six Concluding chapter89
61 Review and reflections89
62 Limitations of the study91
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners91
64 Conclusion92
List of references94
Page | 11
Pages
Maps
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni
hostel and Vusimuzi hostel40
Map 2 Locality map44
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex45
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework48
Figures
Figure 1 Ground floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 2 First floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 3 Elevation of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 4 Collage of exterior imagery of the hostel50
Figure 5 Collage of interior imagery of the hostel52
Figure 6 Municipal amenities54
Figure 7 The adjoining area55
Figure 8 Community meeting agenda74
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga developmenthelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip76
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development planhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip79
Figure 11 Architects Section F-Fhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figue 12 Architects Section E-Ehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figure 13 South Elevation80
Figure 14 North Elevatonhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip81
Figure 15 East Elevation81
Figure 16 West Elevation81
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site82
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units84
Table
Table 1 Total workforce in the period December 2013 - January 2014 Sethokga
sitehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip72
Page | 12
ANC African National Congress
Cllr Councillor
CRU Community Residential Units
DoHS Department of Human Settlements
EMM Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
GPDHS Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement
HRP Hostel Redevelopment Programme
IDP Integrated Development Plan
IFP Inkatha Freedom Party
MSDF Metropolitan Spatial Development Framework
PWV Pretoria ndash Witwatersrand ndash Vereeniging
RDP Reconstruction and Development Programme
SDF Spatial Development Framework
USAID United States Agency for International Development
USN Urban Sector Network
Page | 13
Chapter one will essentially introduce the research report The aim of this chapter is as
follows highlight the objective of the study provide a background to the study and
also discuss the rationale and problem statement In addition to detailing the
research question the significance of this study and the research methodology will
also be reviewed
Coincidently this research report is written and takes place at a time where there has
been somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms With the prevailing question being ldquoWhat iscontinues to be the
role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo Although this study will not in effect
actively seek to answer that particular question it presents a valuable premise for this
study ldquoFamily units to address the stigma of hostel liferdquo
The main aim of this chapter is to contextualise hostel to position the study within an
expanded theoretical framework The main chapter will in part argue that hostels
have largely remained as urban enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric and
that the rigid structures of regulation and control which were imposed on hostel
dwellers have perpetuated a complex state of affairs The literature review section
which details some of the key concepts theories ideas and arguments on the topic
will elaborate further on this
This chapter aims to provide a comprehensive description of the study area and so it
is in this chapter that the local as well as municipal context of the study area will
altogether be considered The aim of this chapter is to provide the reader with a sort
of lsquofeelrsquo of Sethokga hostel and its present-day circumstance It will attempt to
articulate to the reader the authors own experience and account of the study area
Page | 14
in an effort to provide the reader with a well-versed narrative of the multifaceted
nature of the hostel and the complex reality in which its residents endure
The South African statersquos approach to hostel redevelopment conversion is
discussed It is argued that the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of hostel
redevelopment conversion Chapter four discusses a number of state policy and
approaches addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo Ahead of this however the evolution of the
hostel redevelopment conversion approach is examined which dates back to the
earliest (soon after 1994) efforts by the South African government to remedy the ills of
the hostel system
Chapter five examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seeks to unpack
the conceptualisation of the project This chapter reflects and draws extensively on
the findings of the field work and the invaluable insights offered by the key informants
The main components of the hostel conversion project are examined and the vision
of Sethokga personified by the hostel conversion project is presented in chapter five
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoSo what does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
Page | 15
Introductory chapter
In the wake of the political transition in South Africa in 1994 and for some time
preceding this time frame violence squalor overcrowding and socio-political strife
had long become characteristic of some of the features associated with hostels and
the stigma of hostel life (Thurman 1997) Due to its history as systematically
disempowered yet politically vocal enclaves we have come to know or perhaps be
familiar with hostels as highly contentious and antagonistic environments with a
burdened local identity (Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The stigma of hostel life constitutes among a host of conditions an innate reality
where the residents of hostels inhibit isolated destitute and unbecoming spaces
(Segal 1991) Built as single-sex labour compounds to accommodate African migrant
labourers for the duration of their stay in South Africarsquos white urban areas hostels
occupy a unique position within the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape
(Thurman 1997) As sojourners in South Africarsquos white urban areas the law
constructed a lsquolegalrsquo person called a labourer who was lsquoauthorisedrsquo to temporarily
reside in the urban space but had to retreat to their rural quarters once their lsquoservicersquo
had been concluded (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Thus to draw attention to the
unkindness of their living conditions many hostel dwellers have continued for the
better part of South Africarsquos democracy to lsquochoosersquo physical violence as a tool
perceived to best serve and afford some attention to their troubles (Pienaar and
Crofton 2005)
Within the context of this research report the term hostels widely refer to single-sex
dormitory style labour compounds which emerged in South Africa under the
apartheid system and ideology of separate development (Pienaar and Crofton
2005) The ideology of separate development and the resultant influx control policies
were a distinctive trait of the government of a particular juncture in the countryrsquos
history - a government that as part of its mandate held to discourage the permanent
settlement of the African populace in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) This further
translated itself in the governmentrsquos refusal to plan and consent to any sort of
lsquomeaningfulrsquo investment into areas designated for the other who were primarily
located in the townships on the periphery of the urban terrain (Ramphele 1993)
Page | 16
Badly designed poorly built and suffering many years of neglect hostels were
primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for the comfort of hostel
dwellers (Thurman 1997) Conceivably the hostel system socialised its inhabitants into
an undignified and callous condition which has in some respect persisted and has
unfortunately not wholly been reconciled (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In hostels that
were male occupied hostel dwellers were regarded as lsquomen of four worldsrsquo which
referred to their present and existing life within the hostel the surrounding township(s)
places of work and their rural homes (Segal 1991) The hostel system made it
impossible for hostel dwellers to live in the hostel with their families ie wives
husbands partners children (Segal 1991) This consequence is particularly important
to note at this early stage in the report because of the wisdom and context it adds as
the study progresses
Coincidently this research is written and takes place at a time where there has been
somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms Undoubtedly the prevailing question has been ldquoWhat is should be
the role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo The current Minister of Human
Settlements has said that ldquohostels no longer have a place within South Africarsquos
democratically reconfigured state and so the state needs to get rid of hostelsrdquo (Sisulu
2015) However in a nation such as South Africa efforts towards transition are
ambiguous complex and can often be marked by violence (Mosoetsa 2011)
According to Thurman (1997) of an estimated 604 000 hostel beds around the country
in the late 1990s accommodated whole families relatively close to urban centres
Furthermore Thurman argues that hostels present both a significant challenge and an
opportunity for government NGOs developers and hostel dwellers themselves High
density housing stock stood to gain a considerably large supply of low income
(Thurman 1997) Even while a large number of hostel redevelopmentconversion
projects continue to be riddled with tension and difficulty the prospect(s) for change
and reform that they offer cannot simply be dismissed
This study seeks to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel conversion project to
develop an informed understanding of the defining features and characteristics of
this particular hostel conversion project It examines what is and what has been the
nature of engagement and dialogue between the various stakeholders involved and
discusses the insights they were able to offer to this study In 2015 21 years into South
Page | 17
Africarsquos democracy we have to wonder what is needed to make amends and offset
the dishonour of hostel life
11 Background to the study
We have to understand what the hostel system did was to lsquoaccommodatersquo the
African populace in single-sex labour compounds (Segal 1991) Upon their arrival
their presence in urban areas was constrained as they were met with strict rules and
restrictions (Ramphele 1993) In turn social relations were severally volatile and
ambiguous under the hostel system as hostel dwellers were constrained in their ability
to interact in certain or in their own chosen ways (Thurman 1997) There have been a
number of authors who have noted that the notion of family was partly if not entirely
redefined under this system (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were designed with little or no
thought given of human comfort security and interaction and many are still in
appalling neglected and overcrowded conditions (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) For
many people hostels represent a bitter and hopeless reminder of the past while for
others they are a well prized and affordable shelter in an environment of serve
homelessness (Thurman 1997)
Accordingly soon after 1994 South Africarsquos democratic government made some
attempt to convert hostels into environments suitable for family life although the
extent of this has not entirely been clear (DoHS 2015) This was met with hostility
violence and unwillingness by some hostel dwellers particularly those in the Pretoria
Witwatersrand and Vereeniging (PWV) region to have their hostels
convertedredeveloped into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010) The
violence that had become synonymous with hostel life became an overwhelming
impediment that proved difficult to overcome (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that the idea of an unambiguous constant and unrestricted
presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a point of contention for
some of the men who had far too long become accustomed to living lsquoalonersquo as
men Some expressed unwillingness while others found it a struggle to comprehend or
endorse this change that seemed far too unfamiliar and a challenge to come to
grips with (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Thus in hostels where hostel conversion projects have since taken-off the general
attitudes perceptions and reception of the projects have in some respects continued
to be negative and unwelcomed Scepticism tension and hostility add to the already
complex nature of the hostel conversion projects (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
Page | 18
2010) Hostels are still largely spaces confronted with deep social injustices (ie poor
living conditions a lack of privacy overcrowded) and are an insult to the dignity of
their occupants in several ways as both spatially limited and socio-economically
limiting spaces (Ramphele 1993) The limits imposed by hostels onto hostel dwellers
have persisted in protracting unkindness and a distorted conception of the
fundamental purpose of housing Hostels remain as an unfortunate symbol of a
former governmentrsquos refusal and failure to acknowledge the personhood (the
position and quality of being an individual or having feelings perspectives integrity
and human characteristics needs and wants) of the men and women they housed
(Ramphele 1993)
12 Rationale
Arguably hostel conversion projects and particularly the conceptualisation of these
projects is still a relatively under-researched field Based on my efforts to find
published work on the subject and even though there have been a number of
hostels across the country which have undergone or are undergoing hostel
conversion this remains a rather neglected study field
Hostels within their historic make-up were for the most part premised on fairly uniform
ideals arrangements and gender configurations The demographic setting within
some hostels across the country have since become a lot more fluid and departed
from their former mandatory construct (as strictly single-sex spaces) In what were
predominantly male occupied hostels women and children have since moved into
some of those hostels
Sethokga hostel which will serve as the case study for this research is a hostel that is
still predominantly male occupied but is undergoing hostel conversion to convert the
hostel into family units I believe that the fact that the hostel is still predominantly
male occupied presents an intriguing dimension to this study on hostel conversion
and efforts to grapple with the research question
13 Problem statement
In the case of Sethokga hostel a hostel conversion project is underway but it is not
clear what has sparked such a conversion and to what extent it is driven by the
available policies or assessments of needs or what attempt has been made to meet
these needs Subsequently what would the conversion of a predominantly male
Page | 19
dominated hostel rife with historically inherent conditions necessitate Therefore
how has the conversion project grasped the experience of men within such a hostel
and how has it grasped the concept of family life
14 Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units been conceptualised and
based upon the conceptualised ideas does it address the stigma of hostel life and it
what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What led to the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail What is the broad aim and vision
of the project What is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
15 The significance of the study - positioning the study relative to existing academic
literature
The significance of this research report lies in what I believe is a gap in the scope of
work covered over the years on hostels particularly on hostel conversion projects
Based on my efforts to find published work on the subject questions around what
these projects entail their implications relevance and impact remain unanswered
In the work I have managed to access so far this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects has somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore there needs to be more inquiry and study
conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel conversion
projects
As documented by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) there are vast and intricate
layers of engagement communication participation and even discontentment
Page | 20
involved in hostel conversion projects For instance the legitimacy around where
decision-making lies and which avenues are or should be available to voice
concerns have been some of the challenges relating to hostel conversion and have
added to the already complex nature of these projects
There is most certainly room for a study to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel
conversion project and probe this idea that family units could serve as an adequate
tool for the apt reform of hostels as many of us have come to know them associate
with them or even disassociate from them
16 Aim and objectives of the research
The main aim of this research report is to examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project and how the project has been conceptualised
Objectives
To examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
To develop a more comprehensive understanding of the hostel conversion
approach relative to the socio-economic and political context of the hostel
To explore the possibility and potential of family units as a viable tool to
addressing the stigma of hostel life
To examine how the project has understood the needs and challenges of the
residents and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
To examine the specific spatial focus of the project
17 Research methodology
171 Type of research
The methodology used in the study is a qualitative approach to research and semi-
structured interviews were conducted as the primary means of data collection
Additionally the data collection process involved the use of a variety of sources
which ranged from books journal articles newspaper articles and online media
platforms in the form of articles and radio podcasts
Page | 21
According to Cresswell (2009) this particular method to research (a qualitative
method) entails among other things the use of horizontal dialogue conversation and
the exchange of ideas between the interviewer and the interviewees (Cresswell
2009) Key informants were identified on the basis of their knowledge of andor
involvement in the Sethokga hostel conversion project and the following individuals
were interviewed
1st interviewee Mr Vincent Shibambo resident engineer with LTE consulting (the
company facilitating the construction and administration of the project) Interview
conducted 14th August 2015 at the project site The interview took place in the
boardroom of the project site offices
2nd interviewee Mr Jabu Mthethwa housing officer from the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality Interview conducted 17th August 2015 the interview took place in Mr
Mthethwarsquos office at the council offices in the Kempton Park CBD area
3rd interviewee ANC Ward 4 Tembisa Ward Councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi Interview
conducted 18th August 2015 in the ward councillorrsquos office at the ward councillors
chambers situated adjacent to the project site offices within the vicinity of the hostel
4th interviewee Mr Lufefe Sololo Ward 4 Tembisa Economic Development Rep (Mr
Sololo sits on the ward committee that advises the ward councillor) Interview
conducted 18th of August 2015 at Sethokga hostel
5th interviewee Mr Sisa Majikijela official from the Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlements Mr Majikijela is the current project manager of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project Interview conducted 19th of August 2015 in the boardroom
of the project site offices
6th interviewee Mr Malibongwe Dyiki who was a resident of a hostel in Cape Town in
the early 1980s He then became a community representative in later years and then
moved on to be a government official facilitating hostel redevelopments in the
Western Cape He has written and published on hostels and has also participated in
policy discussions on the Hostel Redevelopment Programme Interview was done on
the 7th of September 2015 at the Housing Development Agencyrsquos head office in
Killarney Johannesburg where he is currently working as the Programme Manager for
the mining towns programme
7th interviewee Simba Bako architect with Liefa Architects (appointed by LTE
consulting Liefa Architects were responsible for the design of the family units)
Page | 22
Interview conducted on the 9th of September 2015 at LTE House in Sunninghill
Johannesburg
172 What kind of information is needed
The kind of information that was needed was information which contextualised the
study area within its broader local and municipal context Pre-existing data
particularly demographic and statistical data on the hostel and its surroundings
Ekurhulenirsquos Integrated Development Plan the Metrorsquos Spatial Development
Framework and information that would give an overview of the geographic social
economic and possibly even the political context of the study area is needed
Moreover project reports studies memorandums or minutes and state policy on
hostel conversion would also be useful
173 Collecting data
In collecting data there were a number of methods and tools that were used which
involved moments of ad hoc discussion and deliberation around the topic What was
invigorating and always thrilling was peoplersquos interest and curiosity regarding this
study The impromptu encounter(s) with people who were open and ready to share
their point of views and experience(s) honestly made the data collection process
that much easier
There was a considerable amount of time spent on examining literature books
articles (both academic and media sources) sources on the internet and journals
Collecting data also involved examining similar programmes and projects on hostel
conversionredevelopment so collecting desktop data and consulting library sources
was an invaluable part of collecting data
174 Sampling
The study sample is important for any research The choice between qualitative
quantitative or even the consideration of using a mixed methods approach should
be determined by the research question and not decided subjectively In grappling
with the research question it seemed most appropriate for the purpose of this study to
make use of a qualitative approach It was believed that a qualitative approach
Page | 23
would provide the necessary framework to respond to the research question and
address the aim and objectives of the study In answering the lsquohowrsquo and lsquowhyrsquo
questions that the study would pose a qualitative approach would engage in a sort
of comprehensive exploration of the many-sided and possibly complex dynamics of
the Sethokga hostel conversion project For this reason a qualitative interview-
centred approach was used (Marshall 1996)
Marshall (1996) argues that there are three broad methods commonly used in
selecting a study sample that is convenience judgement and theoretical sampling
techniques Convenience sampling involves the most accessible person(s) it is the
least time consuming requires the least effort and financing Judgement sampling
also referred to as purposeful sampling is according to Marshall (1996) the most
widely used sampling technique With judgement sampling the researcher
purposefully and actively selects a sample that would best respond to their research
question and in principle convenience is set aside While theoretical sampling
involves a process of selection of a sample that is mainly driven by and rooted in a
theoretical position the sample is selected to examine or elaborate a particular
theory (Marshall 1996)
For the purpose of this study the judgemental sampling technique was used and this
entailed the active and purposeful selection of what Marshall refers to as lsquosubjectsrsquo
with particular expertise ie key informants The sample selection was based on my
prior experience and practical knowledge of the study area The limitation however
was that there were quite a number of elaborate and contentious issues at play
which within the limits of this study could not be explored at length on account of
time constraints and the particular focus of this study
175 Ethical considerations
As a young female scholar entering into a rather conflicted lsquotoughrsquo and culturally-
laden environment I was faced with what was an apparent concern for safety and
so on my trips to the hostel I was always accompanied by my father or a friend
Initially my intention was to interview some of the hostel residents but the sensitivities
around the harshness of their living conditions were highlighted as a possible area of
vulnerability and the spate of xenophobia attacks particularly in and around hostels
suggested reconsideration As a researcher I ensured that the participants were all
Page | 24
well aware and informed that their participation was voluntary and they were at
liberty to withdraw their involvement at any stage The interviewees were informed of
the choice to remain anonymous if they wished and that the information they shared
would be used to develop this research report Thus my ethical obligation as a
researcher was to ensure that I did minimal harm and unintentional damage through
my research that I conducted myself responsibly and professionally at all times and
that I reported accurately what I found including unforeseen and even negative
findings
18 Conclusion
Hostels consolidated the migrant labour system They served not only to control the
number of black labour residing in urban areas but also to manage its behaviour As
hostels were designed to be unattractive and uncomfortable many comparisons
have been made between hostels and institutions such as army barracks and prisons
There is a window of opportunity in promoting hostel conversion but injecting
resources into previously marginalised communities have resulted and is resulting in
conflict local power struggles and competition for those resources (Thurman 1997)
The next chapter will discuss the theoretical backdrop of this study and elaborate on
key concepts theories ideas and arguments that have been of particular relevance
to unpacking the research question
Page | 25
Theoretical backdrop
2 Introduction
It is imperative at this point to contextualise the term hostels so as to clearly il lustrate
what is meant by it This section of the report will contextualise the term hostels and it
will examine key concepts theories ideas and arguments that are of particular
relevance to the study
Furthermore chapter two argues that hostels have largely remained as urban
enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
It argues that the rigid structures of regulation and control that were imposed upon
the former inhabitants of hostels were essentially just one part of a multi-faceted and
disconcerting circumstance that has continued to live on within a large number of
hostels (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012) This view that hostels operated and in some
respect continue to operate under a complex set of circumstances is shared and
supported by the work of authors such as Segal (1991) Ramphele (1993) Goldblatt
and Meintjes(1996) Thurman (1997) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) Dyiki (2006) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) Subsequently some of their work will be used to
unpack the research question and draw on certain aspects that resonate with the
case study The following abridged abstract describes some of the complexities
around hostels and the views captured in the work of some of the authors mentioned
above
According to Segal (1991) hostel life and the regulations imposed upon hostel
dwellers made it extremely difficult to maintain family life that is men would leave
their families in the rural areas for long periods of time to find work in the city
Ramphele (1993) notes that the families of the men would then became reliant for
their survival upon the remittance of the men Mapetla (2005) makes a compelling
argument that suggests that within contemporary society men are traditionally
culturally and even spiritually still regarded as the head the protector and provider of
their families even as the lines delineating the roles of men and women within
contemporary society have become faint and more fluid Arguably hostels still exist
within a highly complex setting (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Page | 26
21 Contextualising hostels
Generally hostels were badly designed poorly built and many have been suffering
years of neglect (Thurman 1997) Hostels were primarily built to accommodate
African migrant workers for the containment of their labour over the duration of their
stay in what were demarcated as South Africarsquos white urban areas (Thurman 1997)
There are notably three types of hostels namely public sector private sector and
grey sector hostels (Ramphele 1993)
Public sector hostels are hostels that were built and managed by provincial or local
authorities and mainly accommodated workers across a range of sectors (Ramphele
1993) Private sector hostels were built by private sector enterprise to house private
sector labourers who would mainly be working in the factories and mines (Pienaar
and Crofton 2005) Grey sector hostels were built on public sector-owned land by the
private sector under some form of contractual agreement with a government
authority (provincial or local) but were largely managed and controlled by private
sector employers (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Public and grey sector hostels were
generally situated in the townships (Thurman 1997) However when they were
planned these hostels were generally located on the outskirts of the cities but with
increased urban growth they now relatively tend to be more centrally situated
(Thurman 1997)
Ramphele (1993) argued that each hostel had a distinct form and quality about it
Elements of tribalism certain customs systems of belief and association dimensions of
conflict and conflict resolution were not homogeneous across all hostels (Ramphele
1993) The type of work that the migrant labourers did across the sectors they worked
was often rudimentary It ranged from unskilled to very basic semi-skilled work and it
was quite labour intensive in return for meagre earnings (Ramphele 1993)
Historically hostels were characterised by two main geographic classifications firstly
hostels in the backdrop of an urban context (ie also referring to inner city hostels)
and secondly hostels in the areas around mines (Segal 1991) According to Segal
(1991) urban context hostels had a more diffused grouping of hostel dwellers than
their mining counterparts (Segal 1991) Hostels in urban context developed broader
and somewhat complex relations with the outside community This contrasted with
the extreme isolation of hostel dwellers in hostels around the mines Therefore hostels
in the urban context were to a lesser extent conceived to be lsquomore openrsquo and lsquoless
strictly controlledrsquo However both were essentially sites of control and exploitation
Page | 27
with clearly marked physical boundaries in form of high walls and fences with single
and restricted entry and exit points (Segal 1991)
Hostels in urban areas had government bureaucracies responsible for their
management and maintenance as opposed to a single employercompany (Segal
1991) Moreover hostels in the urban context accommodated a wider and more
diverse range of workers who did not necessarily work for the same
employercompany or have uniform working hours or shifts In urban hostels ethnicity
was not the official organiser of hostel dwellers as men from different backgrounds
and homelands would and could share rooms (Ramphele 1993) Lastly and perhaps
the most important distinguishing feature of the two was the fact that hostels in urban
areas were not under the extensive force of lsquototal controlrsquo as was the experience of
mining hostel dwellers (Segal 1991 Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
According to Pienaar and Crofton (2005) public sector hostels accommodated the
largest number of hostel dwellers Overall the quality of living environment of hostels
was generally poor but this was particularly bad in public sector hostels (Ramphele
1993) Additionally the administrative processes and management of public sector
hostels was under dire strain as no clear records of those that lived in the hostels or
those entering and exiting the hostel were kept (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that although private sector hostels were considered to be
better managed and maintained The general state of all hostels whether public or
privately owned was largely characterised by poor living conditions a lack of
privacy the sharing of very limited spaces a distressed local context and
overcrowded conditions (Ramphele 1993) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) further note
that around the early 1980s hostel residents simply started to withdraw from payment
of rentals and thus the maintenance of the hostels grew even thinner and steadily
non-existent Public sector hostels grew especially financially and politically
unmanageable (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
22 Key concepts theories ideas and arguments
To unpack the research question and contextualise the study within a broader
theoretical framework this section of the report will discuss and draw on a number of
concepts theories ideas and arguments
Page | 28
221 The historic model of hostels the conceptualisation of the hostel system
In grappling with the historic model of the hostel system this section of the report will
discuss two main themes The conceptualisation of the hostel system and migration
migrant labour as conceived under the hostel system It illustrates the effect hostels
have had on shaping the lives and experiences of their inhabitants in unique and
complex ways (Thurman 1997)
South Africa is a country marked by a legacy of systematic discrimination and the
deliberate disempowerment of a lsquocategoryrsquo of its population (Thurman 1997) Hostels
were established supported and perpetuated by methodical policy frameworks and
brute controls to discourage the permanent settlement of the in historically lsquowhite
areasrsquo (Segal 1991) Thurman (1997) argues that hostels occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are symbolic of three centuries of
systematic racial discrimination
Seemingly ignited by and originating in the mining industry in the nineteenth century
the construction of hostels reached a peak during the 1960s and 1970s in the period
that has been referred to as the ldquogrand apartheidrdquo years (Thurman 1997) They were
built as single-sex dormitory compounds to accommodate African migrant labourers
as sojourners in what were delineated as white urban areas (Ramphele 1993) In
hostels which were intended strictly for male migrant labourersrsquo job-seeking by
African women was criminalised and a deliberate policy not to provide family
housing was pursued (Ramphele 1993)
Common to hostels was the blurring and hostility of the boundaries between the
hostel dwellers place(s) of work and their living spaces (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) In
turn some authors have argued that hostels in some sense functioned as a lsquototal
institutionrsquo According to Segal (1991) and Ramphele (1993) geographically many
hostels were isolated and situated literally at the edges of urban areas and society in
general They were primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for
human comfort safety or enrichment (Thurman 1997) The heavy-handedness of the
hostel system imposed a cunning inferiority complex a sense of no escape yet quite
interestingly a later unwillingness and indifference to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have
their hostel converted into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Ramphele (1993) and Segal (1991) make a rather compelling argument and share
the view that the behaviour and conduct of some of the hostel dwellers against
Page | 29
having their hostel converted into family units is indicative of similar behaviour and
actions displayed by long-term prisoners and people contained in barracks They
argue that a substantial number of long-term inmates would in some instances
display great unwillingness and some difficulty to the prospect of re-entering society
after being socialised into a total institution a reformatory (Ramphele 1993 and
Segal 1991) According to a text by Statistics South Africa (2001) an institution can be
defined as a communal place of residence for persons with common characteristics
(Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001) One could then argue
that one of the common characteristics shared by many hostels was the migrant
labourer status attributed to them (Dyiki 2006)
222 Migration and the notion of migrant labour labourers as conceived under the hostel
system
Castles and Miller (2008) argues that all through time and space individuals and
families have been migrating and doing so for a number of reasons Universally the
migration lsquophenomenonrsquo was and has been as a result of varying factors and in
response to certain causes and events such as demographic growth environmental
changes development vs underdevelopment and the seeking of lsquobetterrsquo
opportunities (Castles and Miller 2008) Others have turned to migration to seek jobs
often located or perceived to be concentrated in larger urban centres (Collinson
and Adazu 2006 Castles and Miller 2008)
Migration can occur as a voluntary or forced process This study is particularly
interested in the event of migration that becomes forced migration when the
circumstances of individuals and families leave them little or no choice but to pursue
lsquohopersquo away from their native home-base (Castles and Miller 2008) Arguably this was
characteristic of the hostel model Hostels enabled mines and later other industries to
suppose and cause that hostel dwellers had homes in rural areas (Collinson 2006)
Seemingly the rural populace was the lsquodesiredrsquo workforce ushered into the city and
mines and exploited as labourers for the development of the urban-based economy
(Thurman 1997)
According to Thurman (1997) the residents of hostels were typically considered as
rural traditionalists and lsquodangerousrsquo outsiders by the residents of townships which
surrounded the hostel Their physical as well as social isolation meant that they often
retained strong links with their rural home-base (Segal 1991) This involved the
Page | 30
periodic movement of individual household members between the hostel and their
rural homes (Thurman 1997) The ruralurban linkages which were subsequently
fashioned became a distinguishing feature of not just hostel dwellers but the black
African populace and as a part of their experience of urban life (Collinson and
Adazu 2006) The costly urban world was thus considered by many as merely a place
of work (Segal 1991 and Ramphele 1993)
This type of migration - also often referred to as lsquocircularrsquo or lsquooscillatingrsquo migration -
became characteristic of a sort of temporary sentiment to life and living in the city
(Dyiki 2006) Additionally the events of circular migration presented certain
household dynamics and challenges in maintaining the often faint links between the
migrant and the households family left behind (Collionson 2006 Ramphele 1993)
Conceivably hostel dwellers have for a long time had a common rural orientation
(Segal 1991) ldquoIt has been repeatedly demonstrated that migrants do not leave
behind the countryside in their journey to the cityrdquo and this rural consciousness has
remained central to the migrant labour population (Segal 1991 9)
Within contemporary society the concept of lsquothe new economies of labour
migrationrsquo has emerged as an alternative position and argues that migration can be
and has become a household strategy (Collinson and Adazu 2006) According to
Collinson and Adazu (2006) within their analysis of contemporary migration patterns
migration has now largely become something that is purposefully chosen by
members of a household family This phenomenon involves the temporary migration
of some individuals within the household family in pursuit of opportunities towards
the collective betterment of the family household or even their broader community
(Collinson and Adazu 2006) Under this model of migration family and community
networks are considered to play an important and supporting role in facilitating
migration between urban-based and village-based households families (Collinson
and Adazu 2006) What is then required of the migrant is thatheshe reciprocate the
initial support offered by hisher household family community as received in hisher
rural-base (Collinson and Adazu 2006)
While in some respect migration is becoming a lsquolonged-forrsquo process and somewhat of
a deliberate choice on the other hand adverse circumstances force families
households to partake in this process as a means of survival (Collinson and Adazu
2006) The ability of migrants to maintain both an urban and rural residence in
whatever context ie historic or contemporary continues to present a social
geographic and economically complex state of affairs (Pienaar and Crofton (2005)
Page | 31
223 The notion of bedhold
The context of hostels designed to be uncomfortable and uninviting the closest
likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo was in the form of a bed Every aspect of life and
survival in hostels revolved around a bed (Ramphele 1993) According to Ramphele
(1993) this in turn perpetuated a circumstance of lsquoclientelismrsquo and blurred the lines of
patronage when it came to the exchanging of the membership of beds and when
beds were to be allocated or reallocated (Ramphele 1993) The ill-defined and fluid
relationship of patronage between bed-holders would in some respect function like
and resemble households (Ramphele 1993 Segal 1991 Mosoetsa 2011)
In some sense bed-holders assumed an intermediary role and served an informal
function as lsquolandlordsrsquo thus as proprietors of the bedhold (Ramphele 1993) Hostel
dwellers became lsquobed-holdersrsquo rather than lsquohouse-holdersrsquo in the urban space
(Segal 1991) It became unduly problematic that the bed was the only space over
which they could have any measure of control It after all distorted the perceptions
hostel dwellers developed of themselves in relation to their environment constraining
them to varying degrees (Ramphele 1993) Ramphele (1993) argues that the limits set
by physical space in hostels also defined in very clear terms the inside versus the
outside security versus insecurity family versus non-family and urban versus rural She
further argues that onersquos very identify in the hostel and their lsquolegal existencersquo in the
urban space depended on their attachment to a bed (Ramphele 1993) According
to Ramphele (1993) the bed acted as a sort of mediator thus lsquoa go-betweenrsquo the
hostel dwellers and the rest of society to which they remain somewhat disconnected
and possibly indifferent (Ramphele 1993)
224 The stigma of hostel life
The stigma of hostel life gave a rather conspicuous meaning to lsquoblack urban lifersquo and
their experience(s) of life in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were badly
designed poorly built and many suffer years of neglect (Thurman 1997) There have
been a number of authors who have argued that hostel dwellers suffered a great
injustice to their humanity their perception of self constrained relations with others
and a constant struggle to maintain family networks with their often rural-base
(Goldblatt and Mentjies 1996)
Page | 32
The living conditions in hostels have been expressed in basic terms as shocking
disgusting inhumane cruel and intolerable by both scholars and residents of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Hostel accommodation is undesirable both aesthetically and
conceptually and there are a number of common features which characterise most
hostels a lack of privacy overcrowded and poor living conditions very limited space
and a serious state of disrepair (Ramphele 1993) Failing to delineate private
personal space the purpose of hostels was to ensure a compliant labour force (Segal
1991)
According to Ramphele (1993) hostels represent physical space that is not only
limited but is also limiting Ramphele makes a distinction between the circumstance
and living arrangements of hostel dwellers and township residents Arguing that
although physical overcrowding of sleeping accommodation between the two
(hostel dwellers and township residents) many not be much different in terms of the
ratio of people to roomsbeds (Ramphele 1993) For township residents it is most likely
that they would be sharing these limited facilities with kin or friends rather than
complete strangers (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of hostels some men
women may adapt too well to living in single-sex hostels and would find change too
difficult to cope with (Ramphele 1993)
225 Family versus household configurations
The terms family and household are not necessarily synonymous According to the
Department of Social Development (2012) ldquoa household comprises of either (i) a
single person who makes provision(s) for hisher food or other essentials for living or (ii)
a group of at least two or more people living together who make common provision
for their food and other essentialsrdquo (White Paper on Families in South Africa 2012 11)
Moreover the Department notes that a household can contain a family yet the
members of the household are not always necessarily a family further remarking that
ldquoa household performs the functions of providing a place of dwelling and the sharing
of resources and these functions can be performed among people who are related
by blood or people without any such relationshiprdquo (White Paper on Families in South
Africa 2012 11) This distinction of family and household configurations is useful to this
study for two main reasons (a) as it has been suggested that one of the broad aims of
the hostel conversion approach is to introduce facilitate lsquofamily lifersquo and to inject a
family quality into these historically single-sex environments (b) Is it then supposed by
the Sethokga hostel conversion project that the household configurations in the
hostel are at present existing wholly in the absence of family configurations
Page | 33
It is important to be mindful of the fact that with time households have become
more complex and family structures more diffused (Mosoetsa 2011) Hostel dwellers
through years of living under space constraints and in single-sex accommodation
have developed certain ideologies practices and habits (Thurman 1997) Arguably
the hostel system redefined and reshaped family and household configurations and
constructed a complex social setting (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of male
occupied hostels relationships among men are characterised by hierarchy and
Ramphele (1993) notes that this is legitimised by lsquotraditionrsquo and is based on age
differences The older men are more likely to occupy positions of authority and be
regarded as the lsquoheadsrsquo of the household and in authority to organise the affairs of
the household Whereas the younger men would be cast in the role of attending to
duties considered lsquotypicalrsquo to women and that is the upkeep of the household ie
cleaning cooking In this lsquomanrsquos worldrsquo tradition and age regulate the day-to-day
function of the household (Ramphele 1993) The links between the men and the
families they had have left behind has arguably become increasingly scant and
incoherent (Grieger et al 2013) With the blurring of their lsquobindingrsquo reciprocal
obligations and support the conception of family life was redefined and put under
considerable strain as a result of migrant labour laws and the criminalisation of job-
seeking activity in urban areas of their rural wives partners (Segal 1991)
In both family and household configurations shared obligations and mutual support
takes many forms (Mapetla 2005) The family structure is perceived to be the
lsquocommander and regulator of the activities and conduct of the individual members
The family structure has been set apart from a household in that a household is more
of a residential unit where related andor none-related individuals in a sense lsquoeat
from the same potrsquo (Mosoetsa 2011) In some cases the individuals and members of
a household provide themselves jointly with food andor other essentials however a
household can also consist of a person who lives alone The distinguishing feature is
that a family configuration consists of people individuals who have a blood-kin
connection and this can include immediate and extended relatives but the same
does not necessarily always hold true for household configurations (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005 Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001)
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing
South Africa can still somewhat be regarded as a traditionally patrilineal society
where land and property are traced through the male lineage where upon marriage
Page | 34
a woman is required to leave her native home to reside with her husband at his home
(Mapetla 2005) This system has been more inclined to empower men (Ziehl 2001)
Subsequently within contemporary society and within the lsquonew politics of gender
relationsrsquo property and land ownership have since become a highly contentious
subject Therefore the issue of housing is quite a significant one and warrants some
reflection particularly the aspect of men and housing (Mapetla 2005)
Gender roles have steadily been changing and are increasingly becoming ill-defined
(Ziehl 2001) So how can or rather how should housing projects and interventions
such as hostel conversion projects be more gender sensitive inclusive representative
and reflective of the changing gender roles both in a social and spatial sense
Gender considerations regarding housing and housing projects need to be mindful of
the innate differentiation between men and women and their not always uniform
needs and interaction(s) with space (Mapetla 2005) The often male bias when it
comes to access to housing might just further be perpetuated through hostel
conversion projects The question here is then does this new conception of a
reconfigured living environment in the form of family units make provision(s) towards
addressing any of the housing-related gender biases What do these projects
consider important in terms of gender issues if at all how have these issues been
factored into the projects
Gender and housing related theory has often argued strongest the case of women in
their inability to access housing land the law and related funding (Ziehl 2001) The
issues of gender relations and access to housing have become increasingly topical
(Mosoetsa 2011) Womenrsquos rights access to the law resources and social amenities
have been areas which have gained a significant amount of traction in both policy
and academic circles owing to historically discriminatory laws (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005) However in South Africa and perhaps this is true for many other
societies traditionally culturally and even spiritually men are still to a significant extent
regarded as the head of household the foremost provider for their families (Mapetla
2005)
Within the context of hostels migrant labour laws which also made it a point that the
remuneration of its African labour workforce was as horrendous as the conditions they
lived in shaped a particular aspect of menrsquos relation to housing in the urban context
and their experiences (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In a study conducted by Segal
(1991) a group of men living in a hostel were interviewed to give their account of life
in the hostel According to Segal (1991) it became apparent that the men tolerated
the hostel because they felt humiliated by even the thought of losing their roles as the
Page | 35
provider for their family Some men suggested that they could and would not bring
their wives or children to the hostel for even a brief visit (Segal 1991) In their minds
they were better off alone in the citymine because the burden of their own survival
was already enormous (Segal 1991)
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy
Large sections of the South African state have continued to be institutionally
ineffective unsustainable and dysfunctional (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert 2011) Post-
1994 efforts towards nation-building and state formation in the country have taken
many forms a unitary state the inauguration of a new president of the Republic of
South Africa and the promulgation of the 1996 Constitution of the Republic(Barnet
1999) Furthermore the ideals of nation building and state formation would attempt
to diffuse into a sound and convergent form what was once opposite and adverse
(von Holdt 2010)
The housing deficit in the country was and has continued to be one of the greatest
challenges facing the government particularly the inadequate provision and access
to housing for the black majority who had been rendered destitute and occupying
dreadful accommodation (Thurman 1997) In what could better be regarded as
temporary disaster relief areas than housing suitable for any human to call lsquohomersquo
(Ramphele 1993) Post-apartheid bureaucratic inefficiency class formation
redundant budgetary rituals antagonistic attitudes towards public service vocation
and authority has greatly stifled service delivery imperatives ie social housing
provision (von Holdt 2010) Undoubtedly the role of policy towards addressing issues
such as housing and service delivery is a significant one (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert
2011) this will be discussed further in chapter four
228 The role and significance of community public participation in hostel conversion to
family unitrsquos projects
Public participation in any context is a complex and at times a contentious exercise
Academic literature on community public participation tends to presuppose an
experience or existence of informal unambiguous or authentic relations in
community participation processes (Mdunyelwa 2015) This particularly in housing
related projects and programmes with the assumption that if all the stakeholders
involved are consulted the process of participation is likely to yield positive results and
success (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) In South Africa the notion of public
Page | 36
community participation has gained popularity as a democratic practice essential
for development and nation-building (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their research project entitled ldquoA
Case Study of participation in the City Deep Hostel Redevelopmentrdquo suggests that
there are more complex and less diffused forces at play According to Benit-Gbaffou
and Mathoho (2010) the central question often becomes when and at what point
can one say people have effectively or meaningfully participated This question is
especially relevant and significance to hostel conversion projects and to efforts to re-
configure hostels as lsquofamily units suitable for family lifersquo (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010) According to state policy the hostel conversion redevelopment approach is
and has been a nation-wide intervention initiated by the post-1994 government to
redevelop convert hostels in efforts to de-stigmatise these historically-laden spaces
(Dyiki 2006) Moreover the current Minister of Human Settlement has of late stated
on a number of media platforms the hostel conversion approach also seeks to
rehabilitate these historically single-sex migrant labour compounds into family
apartmentsunits to promote a family-oriented setting (Sisulu 2015) According to a
2001 text by Statistics South Africa ldquoconverted or upgraded hostels should be treated
in the same way as a block of flats and each unit considered as a separate housing
unitrdquo (Statistics South Africa Census2001 3)
The importance and usefulness of public community participation in hostel
conversion projects have been a widely and overly debated topic However this
does not wholly take away from the fact that there are many and varied obstacles
and challenges when it comes to the actual practice and experience of
participation on the ground (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) Even while the political
and socio-economic contexts of every project are varied with different structures and
the coordination of stakeholders take on different forms (Mdunyelwa 2015) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) argue that participation has often become a political
process riddled in processes of negotiation and rampant differences of opinion
coupled with a mix of personal andor political ambitions (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010)
Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their study of the City Deep Hostel
Redevelopment Project outlined a number of issues which the project encountered
before during and after the hotel redevelopment project there included
Page | 37
Before the redevelopment process
Managing change while also trying to mitigate violence the unauthorised
occupation of tenants wanting to gain the benefits of the redevelopment project
and the allocation of units (as a contentious challenge) were cited as challenges
encountered before the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
During the process
Challenges around the design of the units (limitations and constraints with respect to
skills time and finances) the issue of labour the provision of public and social
facilities services (ie cregraveches play areas for the children) were cited as being
encountered during the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
Issues after the project
Tariff rates (with electricity as one of the biggest concerns) along with the
disagreement and discontentment around rental payments were cited as the
challenges which were encountered post the hostel redevelopment process A
central question and concern that arose focused on whether the hostel did not just
became a renovated workersrsquo hostel or if it actually did change into actual family
units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
With the study area for this research in mind I am left wondering if the issues identified
by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) are unique to the City Deep contextproject
or are they to some extent representative and reverberate to the broader
challenges and limitations of hostel conversion projects across the country Certainly
there is some value to participation when it comes to hostel conversion
redevelopment but the process of participation particularly within the context of
hostels as politically and socio-economically volatile environments will most likely be
confronted by sturdy issues of inherent sensitivities and nuances (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010) This is what Mdunyelwa (2015) decisively refers to as binary cultural
political and social structures alluding to the sentiment that some hostel dwellers are
in some respect men and women of two minds set free from the physical shackles of
oppression yet still sadly unable and ill-equipped to live and transform their thinking
well beyond that (Mdunyelwa 2015)
Page | 38
23 Conclusion
Typically the body of work that exists on hostels is unambiguously and largely
concentrated on the historically-laden context of hostels It especially articulates
issues of violent conflict and tension within hostels and their surrounding areas
Conflict situations are often captioned as hostel versus township lsquowarsrsquo There is an
important political backdrop to this which relates to the rural urban links made
mention of in this chapter
Furthermore the poor living conditions of hostels the inadequate provision of services
and social amenities should be considered The loss of family life and the sense that
hostels pose as limited spaces which is a negative reflection on to dignity of its
inhabitants are some of elements associated with the stigma of hostel life (Bonner
and Nieftagodien 2012 Ramphele 1993) This has to quite a significant extent
remained a present-day and associated reality of the hostel setting and has posed
vast challenges to hostel conversion redevelopment projects
This chapter has argued that the landscape of hostels has by and large remained
complex at times perplexing and highly contentious As a resultant the wicked
consequences of the hostel system have been many and varied but all of which
warrant due attention The theoretical backdrop on hostels has been useful in
developing themes that resonate with the case study Sethokga hostel Of particular
relevance to the case study will be role and significance of community public
participation in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Highlighting some of the
issues encountered before and during the project as the project has not yet been
completed Certain aspects of the discussion on key concepts theories arguments
and ideas and how they resonate with the case study will be explored further
Particularly the notion of bedhold the aspect of men and housing the stigma of
hostel life and the resultant consequences of the hostel system will be critically
discussed in chapter five which examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project
Page | 39
Introducing Sethokga hostel
3 Introduction
In addition to the study area this chapter will in greater detail describe and locate
Sethokga hostel It examines its local as well as municipal context and presents a
visual narrative of the hostel The aim of the visual narrative is to provide the reader
with a lsquosensersquo of the physical setting of the hostel thus to provide the reader with a
visual depiction of the multifaceted circumstance of the hostel and the complex
challenges in which its residents endure Chapter three largely seeks to provide the
reader with an impression of the context in which the Sethokga hostel conversion
project is taking place
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)
In the period between 1890 and the late 1920s Ekurhuleni (at the time referred to as
the East Rand region of the Transvaal Province) experienced increased numbers of
black male workersmigrants This was as a result of a surge in the gold mining sector
which took place on the Witwatersrand gold reefs (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
According to Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) of the 15 000 workers that were
employed in the sector some 5 000 worked in what is now called the Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality With time the number of workers in the Ekurhuleni area
continued to rise considerably most of who were oscillating migrants who were either
accommodated in labour compounds such as hostels or shanty settlements in
townships across Ekurhuleni such as Tembisa Duduza Tsakane Kwa-Thema and so
forth (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) also argue that for most of the period of the
booming mining sector in the Witwatersrand reef to well into the countryrsquos
democratic dispensation political contention in hostels had long been a common
feature throughout the region As a consequence hostels and a number of the
townships in Ekurhuleni have somewhat continued to exist within a circumstance of
deep-seated antagonistic political and socio-economic conditions (Bonner and
Nieftagodien 2012)
Sethokga hostel is one of the largest hostels in the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan region
according to the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis Study in 2014 there
Page | 40
were approximately 12 120 residents living in the hostel (Demacon 2014) Of that
roughly 4 000 have since the beginning of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
been relocated or reallocated within other blocks in the hostel to make way for the
construction of the family units (Demacon 2014) Some of the relocations of residents
have been to alternative sites outside the hostel to either Enhlanzeni hostel or
Vusimuzi hostel both situated in the Tembisa area (Demacon 2014)Interestingly
Enhlanzeni as well as Vusimizi hostels are also experiencing issues of overcrowding
poor living conditions and similar socio-economic conditions to Sethokga Moreover
neither Enhlanzeni nor Vusimuzi hostel have or are undergoing upgrading
conversion It was not clear in the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis
Study what the reasons for relocating the residents of Sethokga to these hostels were
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni hostel and
Vusimuzi hostel
Source Demacon 2014
Page | 41
311 Geographic description of the study
Sethokga hostel was built in 1980 and much like other hostels across the country the
Sethokga hostel was badly designed poorly built and has been suffering years of
neglect Sethokga hostel is a public sector type hostel and is owned by the
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Sethokga was built to accommodate male
migrant labourers from a range of industries (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Similar to
numerous other hostels men could live in the hostel so long as they had work in
industries but wives partners and families were prohibited from residence (Thurman
1997) They were entitled only to short-term visiting permits Regular and violent raids
which were carried out by authorities during the day and at night would rigorously
enforce these regulations to chase away arrest or bus back the wives partners and
families of the men back to the homelands (Thurman 1997)
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi initially the hostel
accommodated a lsquomixturersquo of residents black men across all tribes and ethnicities
but he recalls the change that occurred in the 1990s in response to political shifts He
recalls that ldquoafter the release of Mandela and when they started preaching lsquothis
thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions happened according to who was Zulu or
Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Below the ward
councillor explains what he saw as some of the factors that led to what is currently
the strong predominance of Pedi and Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel
suggesting that ldquoThere were mixed feeling when talks were rife concerning
negotiations that could lead to possible elections because the IFP (Inkatha Freedom
Party) was rejecting such a notion At the time it was a situation of the Zulursquos terrorizing
the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa and standing with the white man The
Zulursquos did not like such an idea which caused a divide among the Zulu and Xhosa
This led to conflict between the Xhosa and the Zulu There was fighting everywhere in
the country and you found some Pedis Venda and Tsongarsquos ran away from certain
hostels because they were being chased out and some landed up in Sethokga (
Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) The points made by Cllr Mohlapamaswi flag some
interesting points for instance that this hostel in some respect played the role of a
place of refuge and might affect how residents view it
Sethokga hostel is situated on approximately 22 hectares of land and consists of 29 U-
shaped single and two storey dormitories but mainly consists of the two storey walk-up
dormitories (Demacon 2014) The hostel lies on medium dolomitic soil despite this it
has been said and reported that over the years this has not had a significant impact
Page | 42
on much of the structural qualities of the hostel (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) The
structural sturdiness of the hostel is said to have been mitigated through precautions
such as drainage and the assembly of lsquowellrsquo positioned pavements (Demacon 2014)
According to the ward councillor there are a few women and children living in the
hostel although it is not quite clear how many They are however not recognised as
lsquolegitimatersquo residence of Sethokga (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Arguably a
number of the hostel redevelopment conversion projects that have taken place
across the country have been as a response to the prevailing presence of women
and children who had come to live in the hostel The fact that this hostel has
remained predominantly male occupied presents a number contextual dimensions
to the hostel conversion project This will be explored in chapter five which will
examine the conceptualisation of the hostel conversion project
According to Thurman (1997) it is not uncommon in hostels for up to three families to
live in one room measuring 20 square metres Such rooms were designed to
accommodate two to three workers or even up to twenty people to share a sink a
shower and toilet (Thurman 1997) Yet lsquowholersquo families ie husbands wives children
or extended families have not moved into Sethokga Overcrowding remains a
concern and privacy is scarce in the hostel (Demacon 2014) The dormitories have
very limited physical space and little room for manoeuvre The typical floor plan of a
hostel is provided on the next page and depicts the rigid rudimentary and restrained
design of the hostel compound Sethokga hostel has identical floor plans and
elevations
Page | 43
Floor plan of a typical dormitory compound
Source Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
Figure 1 Ground Floor Plan
Figure 2 First Floor Plan
Figure 3 Elevation
Page | 44
312 Locality
The hostel is situated in the East Rand region of the Gauteng province within the
municipal administrative jurisdiction of the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (EMM)
in the Kempton Park ndash Tembisa Customer Care Area It is located in the north-eastern
region region B of the EMM in the township of Tembisa and lies to the south of the
Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and to the east of the City of Johannesburg
Moreover the hostel is lies between the Kempton Park Pretoria railway link near
Oakmoor station thus a multipurpose and inter-as well as intra-regional public
transport node It is well serviced in terms of public transport and easily accessible
from the R21 (Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
Map 2 Locality map
Source Google maps 2015
Source EkurhuleniGIS 2015
Page | 45
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex
313 Local and municipal context
Tembisa is one of the largest townships in the metro and it is situated in region A of the
EMM towards the north-western end of the municipality The hostel lies in ward four of
the metro to the east of Midrand and to the west of one of the most affluent suburbs
in region A Glen Marais along with other high income areas such as Serengeti Golf
Estate Midstream and the suburb of Edenvale (Demacon 2014)
The Integrated Development Plan (IDP) for the Oakmoor area Area 19 of the metrorsquos
Local Integrated Development Plan (LIDP) was last prepared in 2000 The report
contained among its leading aims to establish an integrated framework to guide and
facilitate development interventions in the area (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000) It was documented in the report that the SDP would guide the
Page | 46
municipalityrsquos decisions in the development and management of the area in a way
that the report articulates as follows by encouraging and setting the framework for
private sector investment and initiatives and by seeking to strengthen economic
activity in the area through the identification of specific projects and programmes
which would kick-start development and lastly working towards improving service
delivery (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) The report reviews the
historically context of the area and argues that basically no provision was made for
service delivery or the adequate management of land and no consideration of land
use imperatives was given This was the case throughout the Tembisa Township (SJN
Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Furthermore the report established that the general land-use pattern across most of
the township was mainly comprised of residential developments It was in this 2000
Integrated Development Plan that it was overtly and in retrospect alluded to that
Tembisa had been established to function at that time as a dormitory settlement for
the neighbouring economic centres of the East Rand region such as Kempton Park
Olifantsfontein and Midrand (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
An abstract in 2000 SDF report(SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000 stated
the following that investigations had confirmed that the Sethokga hostel buildings
were structurally sound except for some weather proofing of external walls and basic
finishes to walls floors and ceiling Some repair work to cracks and precautions to pre-
empt future cracking may be necessary but the hostel blocks would offer little
difficulty in terms of conversion into single and family units According to the report
there seemed to be more problems with engineering services For example the
internal sewer reticulation was said to be so dilapidated that it may have needed to
be replaced entirely Parts of the water supply network would need to be replaced
fire hydrants installed electricity supply upgraded and grading of roads and storm-
water disposal required substantial attention (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
When the completed report was presented in 2000 it set out a case that the
municipality was currently negotiating with a non-profit organisation to acquire hostel
land and convert the hostel buildings into single and family units and manage such
housing stock (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) It further documented
that the lsquoultimatersquo number of dwelling units would be about 1200 with the first phase
of development to deliver 500 units The report suggested that the development
would be undertaken by an external organisation and that few planning guidelines
Page | 47
would need to be proposed to harmonize Sethokga hostel residential complex with
the rest of the Tembisa Township In the report it is assumed that the hostel conversion
would should result in a lsquosecurity complexrsquo type of housing development and
access to the complex would be gained mainly from local distributors such as the
extension of MbizaIzimbongi Street and Nyarhi Street (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000)
The report argued for change in the household profile of the hostel and this would
result in an increased demand for additional social facilities such as schools cregraveches
churches libraries play area(s) etc It was found in the report that space intensive (in
terms of size) social facilities eg cregraveches and a multipurpose centre should be
encouraged within the complex (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Additionally limited retail specifically corner shops should be established within the
complex Lastly the report suggested that it was important to align the services in the
area with the rest of the EMM and ensure adequate capacity at points where the
services connected into the hostel Roads in particular were highlighted as important
in this regard to ensure continuity and appropriate distribution of traffic movement
What is more the report states that traffic should be discouraged within the new
settlement (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
The SDF marked the entire Sethokga hostel complex as lsquohostel upgradingrsquo married to
public open space within the vicinity of the complex churches sports fields and
mixed use areas were proposed in the SDF (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
Page | 48
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework (SDF) 2000
The development proposals in the 2000 Oakmoor area19 SDF proposed that Sethokga hostel be
Redeveloped into family units The SDF also proposed mixed use nodal developments within and around
the Oakmoor area and proposed additional facilities such as cregraveches schools and recreational
facilities in certain areas
Source SJN Development Planning Consultants Planning Area 19 Oakmoor Development
Plan Development Proposals Final Report 2000
This SDF for the area is quite old and has not been updated
since this 2000 plan
Sethokga
hostel
Page | 49
There are 22 hostels across Ekurhuleni which are spread across six regions in the metro
(Demacon 2014) Region A has two hostels of which one is government owned
region B has three hostels of which government owns two regions C D and E hosts
one hostel respectively while region F has sixteen hostels (it is not clear how many are
owned by government) (Demacon 2014)
In terms of social facilities and amenities the study area is situated within a 3km radius
from two schools Rabasotho Combined School and Philena Middle School It is also
within a 2km radius from a healthcare facility - Esselen Park Satellite Clinic - and within
a 1km radius from a sporting facility - Esselen Park Sports School of Excellence
(Demacon 2014) The nearest police station is roughly 6km away and a lsquogenerousrsquo
number of shopping as well as entertainment centres are found within a 15 to 20km
radius of the hostel The nearest taxi route is less than 100m with the nearest train
stations including the Tembisa Limindlela and Kaalfontein stations all falling within a
10km radius (Demacon 2014)
In 2013 the Tembisa economy contributed 83 to the overall economy of the EMM
whilst Ekurhuleni contributed 253 to the overall economy of the Gauteng province
in 2013 (Demacon 2014) Sethokga hostel forms part of the Kempton Park Tembisa
precinct and according the Sethokga Hostels Mixed Typology Market Analysis Report
it falls within the development context of the Kempton Park Tembisa precinct It hosts
a range of housing typologies supported under various housing programmes
(Demacon 2014) which include but are not limited to Informal Settlement Upgrading
programmes and projects Integrated Residential Development Programmes(s) and
Gap Market Housing Units According to this report there also exists several
opportunities for the development of medium to higher density residential
developments (Demacon 2014) The EMMs 2010 Metropolitan Spatial Development
Framework suggests that among the several intentions of the metro the EMM will seek
to expand the affordable housing market and that it will seek to accommodate a
wider range of the metrorsquos populace by making a range of housing options available
for people across different income groupings (Demacon 2014)
This next section exhibits the lsquoambiencersquo of Sethokga hostel as it currently stands It
delves into some detail regarding the current setting of the hostel and takes the
reader through the authorrsquos experience being in the hostel and lsquotravellingrsquo through its
narrow corridors It shares my experience of going into this dauntingly male
dominated environment riddled with metaphorical tones of disempowerment
despondency and neglect All the images displayed here were taken by the author
Page | 50
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel
In terms of its infrastructure the hostel is said to still be somewhat structurally sound
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005) Aesthetically however it appears quite old and rundown
and leaves a lot to be desired The neglected state of refuse and rubble removal
adds to the wear and tear appearance of the hostel Each of the blocks that make-
up the hostel consists of separate dormitories and entry into each dormitory is gained
through a common access point - a door - that leads into a communal area with a
basic cooking and dining area There are no ceilings in any of the dormitories The
paint-work both inside and outside has long worn out In general the hostel appears
especially dull and unsightly
321 Built form architecture
Figure 4
The hostel is old and run-down
The adjoining hostel blocks are lined with a
number of lsquoinformalrsquo traders
This area that leads into one of the hostel
blocks is where a resident displays his goods
for selling
Page | 51
A number of the men have cars which they
park in their respective blocks
Walk-up that leads into one of the dorms
that is later photographed and shows the
condition of the interior of the hostel
The hostel is in an obvious state of neglect
and refuse removal is ignored
I spotted a number of chickens roaming about
in the hostel and a small vegetable garden
near one of the entrances into a dorm
There is one entry and exit point into most of
the blocks in the hostel
Page | 52
Figure 5
This is a communal cooking area It was said
that because the stove is so old and has a
number of issues the electricity powering the
stove is never turned off and so it runs
constantly through the day and night time
The area next to the cooking area is where
groceries and other goods are stored for
safe-keeping
This communal dining area also leads into
the rest of the dorm and the place where the
hostel dwellers sleep
None of the dorms have ceilings or any
added furnishings (ie lighting) The hostel
has never been re-painted or renovated
since it was built in the early 1980s
Page | 53
This corridor leads into the bedrooms where
the men sleep Sheets andor curtains lead to
what felt like very restricted distressing and
unpleasent living quarters
The compartments offer very limited room to
move around and offer little privacy There
are two beds per compartment with up to
three people sharing a bed The living
conditions are as what Ramphele (1993)
described as constraining to varying degrees
since it is a physically restricted environment
with blurred boundaries of personal private
space The physical proximity to others offers
practically no prospect for privacy or liberty
to accommodate visitors
Page | 54
Figure 6
322 Municipal amenities
Male urinal
Communal toilet
Communal shower
Most of the hostel blocks in the hostel have
electricity yet it seems to be offered for
free
The entrance (door) leading to the one
communal shower and toilet facility There is
one bathroom per dorm
Page | 55
Figure 7
323 The adjoining area
Most of the blocks in the hostels have
communal indoor as well as outdoor taps
with running water provided without
charge
lsquoInformalrsquo activity trade takes place in
and around the hostel
The council offices are situated adjacent to
one of the hostel blocks across the street
The municipality does not collect refuse in
the hostel so it is up to the hostel residents to
dispose of their refuse (it was not clear why
the municipality did not collect refuse in the
hostel)
Page | 56
According to the (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) entry and access to the hostel are
determined by ones ability to negotiate for a bed Much like what was described by
Ramphele (1993) the closest likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo in hostels was in the form
of a bed this persists at Sethokga To some extent every aspect of life and survival in
Sethokga revolves around a bed
One gains entry into Sethokga through a block chairperson (Sololo interview 2015)
Some of the functions and responsibilities of these block chairpersonrsquos is to know what
is happening in that particular hostel block The illustration given by the economic
representative for the ward Mr Sololo was that
ldquoWhatever which has been happening in a particular block the chairperson
should be aware of it and should call a meeting Letrsquos say if you are sitting in a
block here and you have got a jukebox and you find that you are selling
liquor and now they tell you that by 10 orsquoclock you close down and the music
should be off Then you do not comply with that the block chairperson will
report you to the hostel committee and they will sit and come up with a fine
for you if you do not listen even after they fine you they will chase you out of
the hostelrdquo
According to Sololo interview (2015) the block chairpersons maintain peace and
order and need to ensure that any conflict is mediated They are elected by the
residents of a given block and are entrusted with their grievances Ideally they should
be first point of contact before anything is to be escalated to the ward councillor ie
if a pipe bursts and they are without water This would need to be reported to the
EMM by either the block chairperson and if the problem remains unresolved it is then
escalated to the ward councillor (Sololo interview 2015)
33 Conclusion
Chapter three has explored a number of elements which model the status quo of the
study field Ironically the conditions in the hostel are not much different to many of
the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg Sethokga hostel also resembles
many other hostels across the country The hostel is overcrowded there is little room
to manoeuvre and there is an obvious lack of privacy The hostel is a possible health
hazard to those who live in it
Page | 57
This chapter shared some of my own experience of the hostel My experience consisted out
of being in the hostel taking photographs in and around the hostel and engaging with the
living environment Inside the hostel I was engulfed by its narrow poorly lit and what felt like
stifling corridors Corridors divided by curtains and sheets led into what were very confined
sleeping compartments Beds offer a place of rest for those who have voluntarily or
involuntarily sought refuge in the hostel Many after all consider the hostels as a lsquobetterrsquo
alternative to homelessness The experience for me was unlike any I have ever felt since the
circumstance of my life has provided a certain comfort that was surely challenged in the
modest time that I spent at Sethokga Chapter four examines what has been the states
approach to hostel conversion
Page | 58
The statesrsquo approach to hostel conversion
4 Introduction
The discussion in this chapter will reflect and review South African state policy post-1994
that concerns hostels Chapter four will also critically discuss and describe the
fundamentals of what have been considered two of the leading approaches to hostel
redevelopment conversion namely the Hostel Redevelopment Programmes (HRP) and
the Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach
There have been a number of state interventions post-1994 that have seemingly been a
lsquosignrsquo of governments lsquodesirersquo to improve the living conditions of not just hostel residents
but of a vast majority of South Africanrsquos who were subjected to poor living conditions
(Thurman 1997) However for the purpose of this study there will be particular focus on
interventions around hostels In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005) concur with a few
other authors that during post democracy the South African government introduced
along with other housing programmes a hostel upgrading conversion programme
aimed primarily at converting hostels into integrated family-oriented developments
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
South Africarsquos housing policy was launched in 1994 and the housing subsidy scheme
promised to deliver one million houses in five years (UrbanLankMark 2011) This would be
delivered through a range of subsidy mechanisms (UrbanLankMark 2011) According to
Dyiki interview(2015) in 1995 or about 1996 a National Hostel Redevelopment Policy was
approved and was among one of the primary national housing programmes (Dyiki
interview 2015) To facilitate nation-building and effective state formation it was believed
that social programmes such as state funded housing programmes would play a pivotal
role in this regard (Netshitenzhe 2011) Moreover the nation-building agenda saw the
government set the country bold and far-reaching goals and these somewhat became
associated with certain policies ideologies and norms (Netshitenzhe 2011) However
redundant budgetary rituals inadequate feasibility studies weak project evaluation
bureaucratic inefficiency managing community expectations and political interference
have been some of the issues that have held back progress (von Holdt 2010 and
Pienaar 2010) As a result housing provided by government has often been poorly
Page | 59
located and in some respect it has continued to perpetuate a reality of spatial
segregation (Charlton et al 2014)
This next section will describe how the hostel conversion approach has been articulated
through state policy through subsequent grants and schemes
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach
Through the provision of grants and schemes government has made efforts to provide
funding for the redevelopment conversion of hostels However there has been
somewhat of a bias on public sector hostels as the grants are provided mainly for the
redevelopment conversion of hostels owned by municipalities or provincial government
(Department of Human Settlements 2015) In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
provide a synopsis of some of governmentsrsquo earliest approaches to addressing lsquothe hostel
issuersquo (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) This is summarised as follows
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Peoples Housing Process
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme (this will be discussed in
section 42)
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Arguably the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units
Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of state efforts to grapple with the vast
challenges around hostels hostel life and the social ills that have become endemic to
hostels (Dyiki 2006) The essence of the approaches listed below was that hostels would
be redeveloped converted to create sustainable human living conditions To re-
integrated these hostel communities into the surrounding township communities (Pienaar
and Cloete 2005)
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership was premised on
the notion that Developers this could also include the municipality would be able to
submit project proposals for the development of housing on stands that were serviced for
people who qualified in terms of eligibility criteria eg a combined household income of
Page | 60
the beneficiary versus the available subsidy amount provided by the state Households
would then be required to contribute to the development (that is the construction of their
house) from their own savings or through what was referred to as lsquosweet equityrsquo
(providing their own material and labour) Locational and geographic factors would also
affect the amount of the subsidy by 2005 Pienaar and Cloete (2005) noted that this
subsidy had delivered an approximate 13 million homes which were primarily low-cost
free-standing
In the case of hostels redevelopment one option was that the subsidy could be used to
build new free-standing dwellings for individual full title ownership on unused portions of
land within hostel complexes This option would require sub-division of the land as well as
the installation of additional service Under the provisions of the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme another option would be to convert existing dormitories into family
apartments that could be sold off to beneficiaries under sectional title This sectional title
is a form of ownership where an individual holds title to a dwelling unit it can be a free-
standing unit or part of a multi-unit storey building The individual owns title together
with all the other owners of sectional dwellings on that property an undivided share of the
land on which the dwellings are built (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) However the challenge
was that where existing dormitories were converted and sold under title the projects
would be exposed to a host of problems that sectional title properties generally
encountered in low-income areas in the private sector ie poor management and
maintenance and difficulties in collecting levies and service debts (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process
The Peoplersquos Housing Process was reportedly introduced to enable communities
particularly those in disadvantaged areas to participate in the provision of their own
housing without the participation interference or involvement of private developers
However technical and administrative support and consultation would be offered by
Housing Support Organisations which were approved to serve this function (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005) What were termed as facilitation grants would be made available by the
government to lsquokick-startrsquo the housing projects The beneficiaries could apply for a grant
to pay for the services rendered by the Housing Support Organisation(s) and the housing
subsidy would be the same as for what was contained in the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) hostel residents could as a
community collective make use of this avenue as a means of obtaining ownership of an
improved residence with the assistance of their local authority a non-governmental
Page | 61
organisation (NGO) or perhaps a cluster of professions who could provide support and
administrative assistance as their Housing Support Organisation (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing was introduced in 1995 and was essentially a
variant of the project-linked subsidy provided to non-profit institutions independent of
government and registered as legally approved entities Households earning less than
R3500 per month would be provided through this subsidy with subsidised rental housing
by these entities In 1995 when the subsidy was introduced it carried a once-off capital
grant of R16 000 per dwelling but by 2002 the amount had increased to R27 000 as part of
the governmentrsquos aspiration to promote medium density housing Pienaar and Cloete
(2005) note that because the hostel redevelopment programme had been in limbo for
several years at the time of their study the Institutional Subsidy approach had been
considered as a viable alternative to accelerate hostel conversion projects The tenure
options under this subsidy it was proposed would include
Rental
Co-operative ownership
An instalment sale option in the form of a lsquorent to buyrsquo practice with a
minimum rental period of four years to qualify for the conversion to ownership
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Under the National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
the National Housing Code (for subsidised housing) delineates subsidised housing as
Permanent residential structures that have security of tenure both internal
and external privacy
Housing that has portable water serviced with adequate energy and sanitary
facilities
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing were set
to give effect to the objectives of the Housing Act 1997 which came into effect on 1 April
Page | 62
1998 To ensure quality and durable housing products that complied with particular
minimum standards (National Housing Report 2009) For instance dwellings had to have
a minimum gross floor area of 30m2 but this has since been amended (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005)
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country
Some international interest has been generated to consider intervention in hostels and
efforts to redevelopingconverting hostels The point of this section is to illustrate that
hostels occupied and in some respect have continued to occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are one of many representations of
the physical manifestation of three centuries of systematic racial discrimination and
economic exploitation (Thurman 1997) The consolidation of the migrant labour system
through hostels the poor living conditions of hostels the dishonour of hostel life and the
control they exert on the African populace Saw hostels gaining the attention of a
number of international agencies and authorities who put resources towards and took an
interest in reconfiguring the disposition of hostels (Dyiki interview 2015)
In the period between August 2002 and April 2003 the USAID (United States Agency for
International Development) extended its support to community based approaches to
housing in South Africa and in turn created a platform where it would have input(s) into
South Africarsquos national housing policy (Urban Sector Network 2003)
Hostel redevelopment was supported under a grant provision provided by the USAID this
had two main objectives The first was that policy and information dissemination should
serve as key objectives and secondly that USAID would have a voice in the facilitation of
hostel redevelopments Initially the grant was meant to run from 23 August 2000 to 30
August 2002 but an extension was requested and the grant extended for the period 1
September 2002 to 30 April 2003 (Urban Sector Network 2003) Additionally the on-goings
of the programme instituted under the grant were to include the following activities
Identifying and conducting research into tenure options and feasible
management models for hostels
Identifying possible needs and challenges and to then conduct nation-wide
research in the hostel sector
Facilitating workshops and consolidating policy submissions and to submit
research papers to the Department of Housing
Page | 63
To publish research papers
To conduct mid-term and final evaluation of the programme
Conducting information outreaches where the USN (Urban Sector Network) would
play an essential role in informing government the private sector as well as
communities about the opportunities which could be created through the
redevelopment of hostels (Urban Sector Network2003)
The Urban Sector Network (USN) then proceeded to make specific recommendations on
the hostel redevelopment approach The USN called for the broadening on the scope of
the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme to include all hostels (private and
grey sector) and not just public sector hostel Recommendations were made that the
norms and standards for the redeveloped hostels should be developed along with
national guidelines for the management of redeveloped hostels by local authorities They
advocated for stronger support for co-operative housing The redevelopment of hostels
to be approached in an integrated and holistic manner and hostels should not be
redeveloped in an isolated manner The subsidy amount for hostels redevelopment and
social facilitation needed to be increased Lastly that hostels redevelopment should
support livelihood strategies and capacity building and training of hostel residents during
the redevelopment process was essential (Urban Sector Network 2003)
The USN proposed a departure from the public sector hostel redevelopment bias of the
Hostel Redevelopment plan (Urban Sector Network 2003)
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme (HRP)
In principal the Hostel Redevelopment Programme supported an unambiguous bias in
favour of public sector hostels (Dyiki 2006) Public sector hostels are those hostels
owned by either provincial or local authorities that offered accommodation to workers
from a range of industries (Thurman 1997) Grey sector hostels (in which the structures
wereare owned by private companies but the land by a provincial or local authority
and private sector hostels) did not form part of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme
(Dyiki 2006) The biggest limitation and challenge of the HRP was in its narrow focus on
solely the conversion of hostels beds (Thurman 1997) The aim of the HRP was to provide
a subsidy allocation that was based per bed but it was criticised as being impractical
and unfeasible and not adequately addressing the issue of housing provision (Dyiki
2006) Dyiki interview (2015) believes that the challenge of the HRP was that it was not
talking to individuals but rather it was a subsidy given to the state to improve the hostel
and the standard of living in the hostel Since most of the public sector hostels were
Page | 64
managed by the municipalities the municipalities received the subsidy and the
residents of the hostels therefore had very little say in how the subsidy could in effect be
used The other challenge was that grey sector and public sector hostels were not part
of the subsidy (Dyiki interview 2015)
The Hostel Redevelopment Programme was perhaps the earliest strategy conceived by
the South African government as a national policy aiming to
Promote habitable and humane conditions in hostel conversions
Ensure the involvement of hostel residents the surroundingneighbouring
community and relevant (publicprivate) authorities and any other entity
affected by the project are involved in the decision-making processes
Facilitate and promote social integration within hostel communities and the
hostels and adjacent communities
Put measures in place to accommodate any persons displaced by the hostel
conversion project
Empower promote economic development and seeks to be development-
oriented
According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment
Programme was largely based on the premise that this programme would make some
provisions for grant funding from the central government towards the conversion or
upgrading of hostels particularly public sector or grey-sector hostels This will be done with
the broad aim of the programme to facilitate and create living conditions for residents
that are humane and hygienic by providing prospects for housing options that are
affordable and sustainable With tenure options for
Rental
Possible ownership for those at the lower income scale
Upon its conception a capital subsidy of R16 000 was initially proposed per family or R4
000 per individual Additionally to be eligible for this programme hostel redevelopment
programmes would need to be
Planned and implemented in a participative and comprehensive manner
with the requirement that interest groups would need to be established
Based on socio-economic studies undertaken to determine and consider the
needs and affordability aspect of those who would be affected (ie stand to
benefit from the project)
Page | 65
Unfailing in ensuring that there is no displacement of residents unless
alternative accommodation is provided
Sustainable with regards to the on-going payments of maintenance and any
other related costs
Purposeful to augment employment opportunities for the hostel residents as
well as the locals in the construction and on-going maintenance of the
project
The broad aim of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme (Mdunyelwa 2015) was to
convert these historically male-occupied spaces which were also subsequently meant
for migrant labourers to family units But it will be done in such a way to able and
capacitate the accommodation of the families of these men In some way but perhaps
not explicitly stated in the Hostel Redevelopment Programme policy brief there is an
element of urbanisation that is implied Therefore it was an attempt to somewhat
encourage the men to relocate their families from their rural home-base (Mdunyelwa
2015)
The shortcomings of the HRP in how it had a restricted focus on hostel beds and
somewhat of an oversight on the complexity of the configuration of hostels saw it being
replaced by the Community Residential Units Programme (CRU) (Pienaar 2010) Dyiki
interview (2015) in my interview with him argued that the CRU Programme unlike the HRP
contains a lot more detail that was perhaps missed in the HRP He further suggested that
the CRU Programme could be considered somewhat of a lsquocost recoveryrsquo strategy by
government to recoup some of the monies spent on these projects As the CRU
programme has a strong rental housing stock component to it (Dyiki interview 2015)
44 The Community Residential Units Programme (CRU Programme)
The Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme has since replaced the National
Hostel Redevelopment Programme At the time of this study there are approximately
2000 public hostels across the country with a vast majority of them still needing to be
afforded some attention and measures to redevelop them (Demacon 2014) According
to the Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the CRU Programme (2006)
the CRU Programme aims to facilitate the provision of secure and stable rental tenure for
lower income persons Furthermore stating that the programme seeks to provide a
framework for addressing the many and varied forms of existing public sector residential
accommodation as the previous approach under the HRP only considered a ldquoper-bedrdquo
Page | 66
approach that proved unfavourable on a number of occasions (CRU Programme Policy
Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme is believed to provide a lsquobetterrsquo suited programme and a coherent
framework to assist in dealing with a vast range of public stock which has for the most
part been indecisively and incomprehensively dealt with (Demacon 2014) The CRU
Programme targets low income individuals as well as households with an average R 3500
monthly income and who have not been able to find suitable accommodation
According to the CRU Programme in the years leading up to 2006 there was an
approximate 4512 of households nationally which fall within the R0-R800 income groups
currently renting and an approximate 4027 falling within the R801 ndash R3200 income
groups (CRU Programme Policy Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme intends to cover the following areas
a) Public hostels that are owned by Provincial Housing Departments and municipalities
b) ldquoGreyrdquo hostels which are hostel that have both a public and private ownership
component due to historical reasons
c) Public housing stock that forms part of the ldquoEnhanced Extended Discount Benefit
Schemerdquo but which cannot be transferred to individual ownership and has to be
managed as rental accommodation by the public owner
d) Post-1994 newly developed public residential accommodation owned by provincial
housing departments and municipalities
e) Existing dysfunctional abandoned andor distressed buildings in inner city or township
areas that have been taken over by a municipality and funded by housing funds
(Department of Human Settlements 2015)
The CRU programme policy document is quite a laborious document In general the CRU
programme seeks to promote and advance the provision of rental options for lower
income groups facilitate communication and participation of residents throughout the
process provide a variety of rental stock and provide secure and stable rental stock This
will be done by what the CRU Programme articulates as providing a realistic funding
programme (Department of Human Settlements 2015)
According to the CRU programme rental stock provided by the programme is to be
owned by either a provincial housing department or a municipality However this has
been a seriously contested position on the part of the individuals and households
affected by the programme who want home ownership (Dyiki interview 2015)
Page | 67
45 Conclusion
There have been a number of projects over the past several years which have in part
articulated the states aspiration to reconfigure the lsquoway of lifersquo in hostels The Hostel
Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units Programme are
considered to have been the leading approaches to reconfiguring hostels within the
countryrsquos broader landscape Whether hostels have or do not have a place in
democratic South Africa is part of what this study is looking to explore
Chapter five introduces the Sethokga hostel conversion project and in principal seeks to
unpack the conceptualisation of the project while reflecting on the findings of the
interviews
Page | 68
The Sethokga hostel conversion project
5 Introduction
Chapter five will examine the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seek to unpack
how the project has been conceptualised Discussing the main components of the
project its main stakeholders the project phases exploring what are its defining
characteristics the broad vision and aim of the project how the project has understood
the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn set to address them and then also
in what way(s) the residents of the hostel have been involved in the project Furthermore
this chapter will examine what the project considers important in terms of gender issues
what have been some limitations of the project while it also considers what the
anticipated impact and benefit of the project is
Lastly and in view of the interviews that were conducted chapter five discusses how the
residents of the hostel and the community of Tembisa and greater Ekurhuleni will know
that the project has been completed and has been successful By and large this chapter
offers testament of the findings from the field work and reviews the rationale of the
Sethokga conversion project To conclude this chapter a collage of diagrams and
images will be presented to provide the reader with greater insight(s) into the Sethokga
hostel conversion project
51 Outline of the main components of the project
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project
There have been a number of stakeholders involved in the Sethokga hostel conversion
project the main stakeholders include
o The Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement (GPDHS)
o LTE Consulting
o The Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
o The ward councillor and various community committees and leaders
o The Sethokga Hostel residents
o The community of Tembisa
Page | 69
The roles of the stakeholders are summarised as follows National government is the key
funder of the Sethokga hostel conversion project the funds are transferred to the GPDHS
who have to then ensure that the costs of the project are managed LTE Consulting is a
consulting company appointed by the GPDHS for the oversight and construction of the
Sethokga hostel conversion project They work in collaboration with the EMM (the local
authority) and its various departments such as the services department the energy
department quality assurance etc However the GPDHS remains the lsquomain decision-
makerrsquo and lsquocustodianrsquo of the project with the lead oversight on the budget and
programmeproject management The project manager Mr Sisa Majikijela is the official
from the GPDHS that is directly responsible for supervision and coordination of the
project The ward councillor and the various community committees leaders facilitate
avenues of communication and engagement between the officials (from province the
EMM and LTE) with the residents of Sethokga and community lsquoAs the eyes and ears on
the groundrsquo (Majikijela interview 2015) ideally the ward councillor and various
community committees leaders have an important role to play in ensuring that the
Sethokga residents and community will be the rightful recipients of the project The
Sethokga hostel residents and broader community have a vested interest in the project
because it stands to affect andor benefit them (Sololo interview2015)
Once the project is completed with the family units fully constructed (ie with furnishings
such as trees plants parking bays and so forth) and the services installed The project will
be handed over to the EMM for on-going administration maintenance and the
collection of rentals (Shibambo interview 2015) The Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlement in collaboration with the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and LTE
Consulting play a key role as facilitates of the conversion of Sethokga hostel into family
units (Majikijela interview 2015)
522 Project phases
The data regarding the project phases was easily accessible and generously provided by
the consulting resident engineer and the architect providing me with a market analysis
study and a few other key documents The development concept of the hostel
conversion project divides the project into three phases and further subdivides each of
the phases into two phases phases A and B (Demacon 2014)
Initial studies (ie pre-feasibility studies) were done in 2008 but the demolition of the first
four blocks of the hostel demolished for the current phase 1A only took place in August of
2011 and it was anticipated that phase 1A would be completed and handed over to the
Page | 70
municipality by the end of 2014 but this did not happen (Majikijela interview 2015) At the
time of conducting fieldwork between the months of August and September 2015 it was
said that phase 1A was near completion with just the landscaping parking and water
provision left to completed (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
Phase 1A of the project was meant to bring to completion a total of 240 units
accommodating 1 194 people to provide 69 parking bays (one per four units) a total of
54 one bedroom units 117 two bedroom units and 69 three bedroom units at an average
unit size of 324m2 477m2 and 588m2 for the one two and three bedrooms respectively
(Demacon 2014) However only a total of 222 units have been built and this shortfall was
largely attributed to the underlying dolomite geological conditions of the site (Bako and
Shibambo interview 2015)
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
The Sethokga hostel conversion project has been administered under the CRU
programme and forms part of a national agenda to convert hostels into family units
(Dyiki interview 2015) The target group under the CRU programme is individuals and
households earning between R800 and R3 500 per month who are able to enter what the
CRU programme has termed the lsquoformal private rental and social housing marketrsquo
(Demacon 2014)
The new residential units (the family units) are situated on ervan 128 and 5729 of the
Sethokga complex within the administrative jurisdiction of the Kempton Park Customer
Care Area (CCA) which is the administrative body conducting oversight of development
and town planning affairs for the Tembisa and Kempton Park areas (Demacon 2014)
The family units are three storey walk-ups and appear somewhat spacious and far more
appealing than the hostel structures The CRU proposes that bachelorsone bedroom
units of 20m2 to 35m2 should be allocated at a monthly rental of R270 ndash R450 a two
bedroom unit of 35m2-45m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R450 to R850 and
that a three bedroom unit of 45m2-80m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R850 ndash
R1650 Rentals have been and remain a contestation in a number of hostel conversion
projects across the country and Sethokga is no different According to the economic
representative for the ward Sololo interview (2015) the residents of Sethokga hostel are
contesting that they want to pay R150 for a one bedroom unit R200 for a two bedroom
unit and R300 for a three bedroom unit
According to the principles of the CRU programme the ownership of the rental housing
stock is to be reserved by either the Gauteng Provincial Department of Human
Page | 71
Settlement (GPDHS) or the EMM The ownership of the family units can be transferred by
the GPDHS to the EMM in line with the Housing Act no right(s) of ownership can be
transferred to tenants (Pienaar 2010)
The process of the Sethokga hostel conversion has on an administrative and government
support level been facilitated through a grant allocation from national government to
province (GPDHS) This grant has made provisions for pre-feasibility studies
socialcommunity facilitation the relocationreallocation of some residents (within the
hostel or to alternative sites to make way for demolition and construction of phase 1A)
and the consideration and compensation of construction costs and professional fees
(Majikijela interview 2015) The allocation of the units determining rental structures
applying indigent relief measures where necessary rental collection and maintenance
as well as the management of the family units are factors determined by the GPDHS and
the EMM cooperatively (Sololo interview 2015) The hostel residents are then at some
level consulted and lsquoencouragedrsquo to participate in this regard (Dyiki interview 2015)
Seemingly throughout project implementation the stakeholders have been kept informed
of the status and progress of the project With respect to notifying the hostel residents and
general public notices are placed in and around the hostel to inform them of meetings
and the ward councillorrsquos office take the lead on this (Mthethwa interview 2015)
There have been a number of communitypublic meetings that have taken place as the
project has progressed From the fieldwork I was not able to draw on precisely how many
meetings had taken place since or precisely when the meetings took place or what was
discussed in each of those meetings Generally the ward councillor said at least once a
month a consultative and progress report meeting would take place between the
various stakeholders where officials would engage the hostel residents and general
public
According to Majikijela interview (2015) the ward councillor and the economic rep the
main area of involvement on the part of the hostel residents has been in providing
labour A small percentage of the residents have been involved in the construction-work
and some of the clerical work on the project Their involvement in discussions on the
project is said to often be arbitrarily halted by political interference (Sololo interview
2015) For instance Bako interview (2015) the architect recalled that on the design of the
family units Liefa Architects did not talk to the end user ie the residents to ask them
what they wanted Instead a design which was informed by other examples of similar
projects was presented to the residents of Sethokga and the general public (Bako
interview 2015) ldquoThe design of the hostel was not lsquoexclusiversquo to Sethokga and its contextrdquo
(Bako interview 2015)
Page | 72
In relation to the size of the hostel and its residents only a very small percentage of the
hostel residents have been employed in the project the December 2013 January 2014
labour records reported the following
Table 1
Total workforce 66
Females 7
Males 59
Youth 28
Adults 38
Semi-skilled 20
Skilled 22
Disabled 0
General workers 24
Source LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor report
I was fortunate to have attended one of the community meetings that were held at an
old community hall within the vicinity of the hostel This meeting took place on a
Saturday the 15th of August 2015 and it was quite the experience There was a relatively
strong police presence at the meeting The police kept watch and managed the
activities inside and outside the community hall As there were concerns that the
proceedings might get out of hand and a possible tussle between those in attendance
might arise The meeting was chaired by the ward councillor and aside from the residents
of Sethokga in attendance was one official from the GPDHS an official from the EMM
community leaders and ANC committee members
There was an obvious and overwhelming male presence in the meeting tempers ran
high and there was an observable resistance from the residents of Sethokga to the
presence of the three females in the meeting This included me and two female
committee members Several times the meeting was disrupted by shouts and echoes of
discontentment questioning what women were doing at a meeting for men lsquordquothey have
no place here they do not even live hererdquo were the words of some of the men Our
presence seemed to really infuriate some of the men This was similar to what Ramphele
(1993) Segal (1991) Thurman (1997) and Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) observed in
their work and suggested that even now and within the context of Sethokga that the
men in the hostel are still quite at odds with having women as a part of their lsquogathering of
Page | 73
menrsquo and possibly even living among them The demeanour of some of the men in this
meeting suggested that they found the presence and role of women in these meetings
unneeded It was evident that these men had become far too accustomed to living
lsquoalonersquo as men Ramphele (1993) noted that the idea of an unambiguous constant and
unrestricted presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a serious point
of contention for some of men Some men expressed unwillingness while others a
struggle to comprehend or endorse this change that seemed overly unfamiliar and
challenging to come to grips with (Ramphele 1993) From my observation in this meeting
the same seems to hold true for Sethokga
The purpose of the meeting was to consult the hostel residents who were identified to be
the first recipients beneficiaries of the allocating of family units to consult them on issues
of final rental proposals allocation processes and status of the project The invitation for
this meeting was apparently only extended to those particular individuals but
subsequently the meeting was taken over by those who had objections to the process of
allocation rentals and why the meeting sought to exclude them and divide the residents
Generally the meeting was unruly and the ward councillor as well as the community
leaders and committee members struggled to manage the crowd and the rampant
tempers in the room
The agenda for the meeting is provided below to provide the reader with some context
and outline of the intension of the meeting Unfortunately tempers ran especially high in
this meeting and in my opinion none of the items on the agenda were successfully
addressed
Page | 74
Figure 8 August 15 community meeting agenda
Source Sethokga Community meeting 2015
521 Broad vision and aim of the project
The vision and aim of the project was described by the key informants who to some
extent unanimously used the following key words integration sustainability community
participation to improve peoplersquos lives restoring honour addressing the ills of hostel life
and bringing families into a safe and secure environment The housing officer for me
captured well the overall sentiments of the key informants when he said ldquowe are
surrounded and have so many companies in Tembisa so clearly you will find letrsquos say a
white guy working in the area but then they travel to Kempton Park or some other area
outside Tembisa and that is where they live So it would be nice to see him living in
Sethokga The project is about integration and not just integrating the residents of
Page | 75
Sethokga to the rest of the township but other ways of integration like racial integration
That is what I want to seerdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015)
Additionally the broad vision and aim of the hostel conversion project is to instil a culture
of payment into not just the hostel but the broader community ldquoPeople cannot just keep
wanting everything for free government cannot afford itrdquo The interviewees that
expressed this position were Majikijela Sololo Mthethwa Dyiki Bako and Shibambo
Seemingly under the CRU programme the project would seek to influence and instil this
culture of payment through the rental housing stock focus of the programme That
largely seeks to promote government owned and managed rental housing stock a
departure from the lsquofreersquo housing approach (Bako interview 2015)
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga development
Source Liefa Architects 2015
Phase 1B Phase 2B Phase 3B
Phase 1A Phase 2A
Phase 3A
Page | 76
What was surprising to me was that the family units are not intended to be occupied by
current residents only The idea is that some of the current residents would live elsewhere
and when this question was posed to the official from the GPDHS Majikijelarsquos interview
(2015) response was that the hostel residents who did not qualify in terms of the required
criteria for the renting of the units would be allocated RDPs in the neighbouring area of
Esselen Park but he could not provide clarity as to how and when this would happen
The vision of Sethokga that can be seen from the plan provided below is a reconfigured
locality Rehabilitated single-sex compounds into self contained family units furnished
with child care facilities park(s) garden(s) a community centre recreation facilities and
parking areas
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn
set out to address those needs and challenges
Although the CRU Programme only sets particular administrative operational and
project facilitation guidelines Arguably these guidelines do in some respect address
a number of the ills associated with hostels such as the issue of overcrowding lack of
privacy and poor living conditions (Pienaar 2010) Within Sethokga there are
challenges of tribalism high prevalence of HIV drug abuse alcohol abuse
criminality overcrowding lack of privacy possible health hazards a lack of ablution
facilities The hostel being unsafe for women (especially those who are staying in the
hostel illegally) was identified and shared by the key informants as some of the major
challenges confronting the hostel This view was shared by the ward councillor the
housing officer from the EMM the project manager from the GPDHS the consulting
engineer and the wardrsquos economic representative
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi the issue of tribalism occurred
as a result of what he recalls as a defining political shift ldquoafter the release of Mandela
and when they started preaching lsquothis thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions
happened according to who was Zulu or Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Here the ward councillor explains what he saw as
some of the factors that led to what is currently the strong predominance of Pedi and
Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel suggesting that
ldquoThey were mixed here when they started talking about negotiations that
there must be elections and then the IFP (Inkatha Freedom Party) was
rejecting that and that had nothing to do with membership it was a situation
of the warlords the Zulursquos terrorizing the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa
Page | 77
and standing with the white man The Zulursquos did not like that so that is where
the Zulu and Xhosa divide started and that is when you found that in
Sethokga it became predominantly more Xhosa there was fighting and war
the Zulursquos were chasing people out of their territory at the other hostels The
Xhosarsquos ran to Sethokga There was fighting everywhere even here in
Sethokga and all over the Pedis Vendas Tsongarsquos they all ran away from
those hostels where they were being chased out and they came hererdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
It was unclear as to the extent to which the project dealt with any of these
challenges and how or if they were factored into the project The project seems to
have a general lsquobest practicersquo approach to hostel conversion irrespective of the
circumstance of a particular hostel
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project
ldquoThe political volatility of the project poses an enormous threat to the successful
allocationletting of the family unitsrdquo (Majikijela interview 2015) On the part of the
key informants their continued inability to answer the perhaps not so simple question
of what would happen to those who could not afford the monthly rental of the family
units This suggested that the issue of rentals has remained a grey area even as the
project heads towards project completion ldquoWe will worry about that when we get
thererdquo was the brisk response to my inquiry on this matter Similar to what was
observed by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in the City Deep Redevelopment
project Sethokga faces a similar challenge
Certainly public community participation in any context is a complex and at times a
contentious exercise (Mdunyelwa 2015) I remain hesitant whether the Sethokga
hostel conversion project has been able to lsquotrulyrsquo engage residents and the broader
community in a transparent and reciprocal manner Seemingly affordability will be
the determining factor of who will be able to rent a unit To those who cannot afford
it stands to be seen what remedy will be extended to them
Moreover the following factors were cited as some of the limitations of the project
the lack of transparency political interference an inadequate dissemination of
information to residentscommunity and the projects failure to respond to what the
solution(s) will be for lsquonon-qualifyingrsquo residents who cannot afford the monthly rentals
Page | 78
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful
I wanted to find out from the key informants particularly those who have been
directly involved in the conversion project what for them would constitute a
successful project and how from their point of view the residents and the greater
community would know that the project is completed and has been
successfulunsuccessful Overall the leading response was that a project would be
successful when the family units are occupied Some of the interviewees added that
the process of allocating the units and resolving the myriad of issues are most
certainly likely to cause further delays and will require intricate resolution (ie peoplersquos
unwillingness and otherrsquos inability to pay tension and opposition to paying rentals
opening the letting to tenants who are not hostel residents and so forth)
In summary the thoughts shared by the housing office at the EMM and the wardrsquos
economic representative capture in essence the general position held by every one
of the key informants
ldquoFor me a complete project will be the units functioning on their own and then
people will be told during a public meeting We also need to involve the mayor the
MECs and the media People will be told that it is finished and this is what is going to
happenrdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015) ldquoAfter it has been completed I want to see 80
percent of the people who have been staying in the hostel still residing in the hostel
It must not just be open to whomever There are people as far as Johannesburg who
want to stay here because they see it being comfortable and nice forgetting we are
looking to improve the lives of the current hostel dwellers There are even those in the
township who think that people of the hostel cannot pay so this is not for themrdquo
(Sololo interview 2015)
Page | 79
53 Visual narrative of the family units
531 Architectural designsplans
The design of the family units is what the architect referred to as a multi-storey approach
ldquoThe three storey walk-ups address the need for housing much better than an RDP wouldrdquo
(Bako interview 2015) They have an urban apartment-like feel about them but the
mundane (uniform) paintwork gives them a distinct government provided social housing feel
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development plan
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 80
Figure 12 Architects Section E - E
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 11 Architects Section F ndash F
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 13 South Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 81
Figure 14 North Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 15 East Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 16 West Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 82
532 The project site of family units
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site
View of the site of the family units from one of
the hostel blocks situated adjacent to the
construction site across the street
Construction of the family units
commenced in August of 2011
Site notice placed at the entrance of the
family units construction site
The Sethokga community hall situated at
the entrance to the family units
construction site and adjacent to the
council offices
Page | 83
For the most partthe construction of the
family units is nearing completetion
Walking through the site personally I felt that
the family units had a somewhat prominent
RDP lsquolookrsquo about them
Ground floor view
The entrance into the construction site of the
family units and the site office which is
situtated within the vicinity of the site
Page | 84
533 Inside the Family units
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units
Doorway into one of the three bedroom
family units which leads into an open plan
dining and kitchen area
Each unit has its own dining sitting and
kitchen area
The construction site is lsquopolicedrsquo by the Red
Ants (a private security company)around the
clock and also a private security company
Some of the security members seen on site
they insisted I take a picture of them to
include in this study
Page | 85
Built-in sink and geyser
The family
units offer a number of distinct qualities that
the hostel clearly does not have which
include privacy and a dignified living
environmentspace
Each unit has its bathroom with a built-in
toilet bath and shower
Shower
Separate and additional toilet as part of the
three bedroom family units
The diningsitting area and two adjacent
bedrooms
Page | 86
The site of the family units is being guarded by a private security company and members
of the Red Ants (a private security company) When asked about this the official (the
project manager overseeing the Sethokga hostel conversion project) from the GPDHS
said that this was necessary to ensure that no unauthorised occupations take place This
was also to guard against any possible vandalism or the looting of materialsequipment
or the site office (Majikijela interview 2015)
54 Summary of main themes and findings
This study had a number of themes which resonate with the case study The localised
context of Sethokga hostel offered great insights into the current state of hostels as
spaces and places that still largely exist within a context of volatility poor living conditions
and complex socio-economic challenges (Thurman 1997) The historic exploits on hostels
revealed and I suppose confirmed that the hostel system was established supported and
perpetuated by methodical policy and controls to discourage the permanent settlement
of Africans in urban areas or any intention of relocating their family to urban areas (Segal
1991) Furthermore within the contemporary South African context this has posed a
number of challenges and has been a longstanding reality of a number of hostel dwellers
as observed in the work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010)
The view from one of the family units (a ground
floor three bedroom unit) is onto the ward
councillorrsquos offices and the hostel in the
distance
One of the three bedrooms in the family
units
Page | 87
Sethokga hostel is also one of many hostels that exist within a historically-laden context
The strong prominence of Pedi and Xhosa native speaking men in some respect also
speaks to the events of circular migration that are still a lived-reality of the men of
Sethokga This according to the ward councillor has meant that the men have had to
maintain ties with their families in the Eastern Cape and Limpopo while most of them live
in Sethokga away from their families (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) In terms of gender
issues the aspect of men and housing the hostel conversion project does not adopt a
particular stand on this Seemingly the project makes no effort to appreciate the
apparent rural location of the wives partners children and families of a vast majority of
the men in Sethokga The idea is that anyone who is able to afford the monthly rental of
the family units can sign a lease agreement and rent a unit However this presents a
number of issues and leaves a lot unaccounted for and unanswered ie will the families
of the men in the hostels make a transition to join them in the family units Is this even a
possibility for them what impact would this have on the already stretched social
amenities in the area Arguably in the case of Sethokga this oversight has been a serious
area of contention and has amplified the political volatility of the project
The heavy-handedness of the hostel system cunningly imposed a sense of no escape
yet quite interestingly the later unwillingness to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have their
hostel converted into family units (Thurman 1997)
Among the key findings of the research report is that the lsquorental onlyrsquo tenure option and
approach to the hostel conversion project was the biggest challenge and one of the
most critical points of contention (Pienaar 2010) On the one hand the hostel residents
are arguing that they cannot afford the proposed rentals while on the other hand
officials are of the opinion that this is in fact untrue and not wholly representative of the
attitude(s) of all the hostel residents Thus a supposed unwillingness to pay and a culture
of entitlement was cited by the key informants as the underlying state of affairs and one
that posed the biggest threat to the project and in particular how the family units would
be allocated
Although the project is for the most part about converting Sethokga hostel into family
units in principal it is also about redress integration improving the living conditions of
Sethokga residents reconfiguring the mental and physical landscape of hostels in
contemporary South Africa and introducing children and women into the hostel
Integration was repeatedly cited by the key informants as the main imperative of the
study Political interference and the very particular sensitivities around political allegiance
Page | 88
(keeping in the mind the local elections are fast approaching) are factors that were
cited would cause the greatest difficulty in the allocation of the family units
54 Conclusion
Undoubtedly the Sethokga hostel conversion project has a number of components and
features to it that are complex in part ambiguous and would require further and more
detailed study Seemingly the CRU programme is a lsquodeparturersquo from the Hostel
Redevelopment Programme In part it offers prospects to facilitate the provision of
affordable rental tenure for those earning below R3500 while seeking to promote the
integration of publicsocial housing into the broader housing market Under the
administration of the CRU programme one of the leading aims is to facilitate the creation
of sustainable public housing assets (Pienaar 2010) However the CRU programme has
been criticised as a framework that is largely operating in a policy environment that is
hostile elaborate and not speaking to the needs of the people on the ground
Furthermore many see it as solely a hostel upgrading policy viewed often to be done
impromptu in response to local pressures (Pienaar 2010) To paraphrase Pienaar (2010)
the vagueness regarding the roles and responsibilities of the respective provincial
department of human settlement and municipalities has not provided much confidence
in hostel conversion projects
Chapter five has examined the Sethokga hostel conversion project and attempted to
unpack how the project has been conceptualised This chapter has identified and
outlined the main components of the project its main stakeholders and what has been
their role in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Discussed were the project phases a
number of critical elements such as how the project has understood the needs and
challenges of the hostel residents In addition to this chapter five outlined the way(s) in
which the residents have been involved in the project if the project considered anything
important in terms of gender issues and if what have these been factored into the
project By and large chapter five drew extensively on the findings of the fieldwork and
made an effort to narrate some of the insights and perspectives shared by the key
informants To conclude the chapter a collage of diagrams and images were presented
to offer the reader a visual narrative of the site of the family units
Page | 89
Concluding chapter
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoWhat does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
61 Review and reflections
This research report consisted of six chapters chapter one introduced the study
chapter two provided the theoretical backdrop of the study chapter three
introduced the study area (Sethokga hostel) chapter four discussed the evolution of
hostel redevelopment conversion and what has been the states approach to hostel
conversion and chapter five examined the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project
In chapter one the main point of discussion was the research question outlining the
aim and objectives of the study and the research methodology
Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project been conceptualised
in how the project has been conceptualised does it address the stigma of hostel life
and it what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What informed the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail what is the broad aim and vision
of the project what is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
Page | 90
In chapter one it was also argued that this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects had somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore that there needed to be more inquiry and
study conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel
conversion projects
The studyrsquos theoretical backdrop was discussed in chapter two The aim of this was to
contextualise the term hostels as to clearly illustrate what is meant by it In addition
to drawing on particular strands of literature concepts ideas and arguments that
resonated with the study Chapter two argued that the historically the landscape of
hostels has by and large been complex at times perplexing and highly contentious
Chapter three introduced Sethokga hostel It elaborated on the locality of the hostel
and its local as well as municipal context A visual narrative of the hostel was also
provided and this captured the current state of the hostel and the conditions in which
its residents endure It was established that ironically the conditions in the hostel are
not much different to many of the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg
The hostel was badly designed poorly built and is suffering years of neglect it is in
appalling and overcrowded condition
Chapter four described the evolution of hostel redevelopment conversion in the
country and what has been the states approach to hostel conversion post-1994 This
chapter discussed in some detail the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme Arguing that these programmes have to
date been the lsquoforerunnersrsquo of the statersquos approach to addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo
While in chapter five the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
was examined Chapter five was the crux of this research report The discussions in the
chapters before it set up the groundwork for a critical exploration of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project and for unpacking the research question
Chapter six concludes this study and seeks to answer the question ldquoso what does this
mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo Since this
report was conducted as part of the requirements for the partial fulfilment of an
Urban and Regional Planning honours qualification It is important to address the ldquoso
what for plannersrsquo question and the value that this report stands to offer to the
Page | 91
planning profession Firstly let us reflect on what have been some of the limitations of
the study
62 Limitations of the study
For the most part this study had a wealth of information and sources to draw from
The insights and wisdom provided by the key informants were invaluable their
willingness and enthusiasm to participate in this study was not something I had
anticipated but I remain truly grateful
Due to certain constraints more especially time constraints and the particular scope
focus of the research report this posed some limitations to the study In only
interviewing and engaging with officials and not with the residents of Sethokga the
voices opinions and views of the officials told only one side of a many-sided story
How the project affects and has affected the residents Is this something they want
support and for those who do not what are some of their reasons for contention Is
circular migration still as prominent a feature within the current context of Sethokga
What is the present-day nature of household configurations in the hostels (is the duty
of the older men still to order the actions of the younger men ie the cleaning and up
keeping of the communal area and other household duties) what for the residents
of Sethokga would constitute a successful project
Even as this study concludes the side of the hostel residents remains largely untold
and unreported Furthermore the supposed apathy on the part of the hostel residents
and the views expressed by the key informants that family units offer the most ideal
and best alternative to the residents of Sethokga could not be explored and
interrogated further given the limitations of the scope of the study
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners
Within contemporary South Africa there have certainly been a vast number of
conflicting views held regarding what should be the role and future of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Although academics policy makers bureaucrats developers and
the general public have usually been unable to reach longstanding middle-ground
on what should be done about hostels One of the more widely held views is that
hostels certainly present a real challenge but also an opportunity For government
Page | 92
developers non-government organisations (NGOs) built environment practitioners
and needless to say the residents of hostels themselves (Thurman 1997)
Planners are frequently cast in the role of performing a balancing act (Campbell
2006) As a result the adaptability of the planning profession as a coherent and
impartial discipline has over the years become rather topical subjects (Campbell
2006) This has inevitably continued to require new and innovative ways of lsquoseeingrsquo
lsquocomprehendingrsquo and lsquodoingrsquo things in order to shape and re-shape an inherently
divergent and historic-laden urban landscape (Jupp and Inch 2012) In the midst of
the shifts in the traditional conception and role of the planning profession as a merely
procedural and administrative activity (Harrison and Kahn 2002) planning is still to a
great extent closely tied to government structures (Cornwall 2002) Therefore within
this particular context of government driven intervention urban planning
professionals stand to be instrumental facilitators of development and offer essential
expertise and tools towards addressing some of the challenges within our urban
landscape (Albert and Kramsch 1999)
This study observed a range of intertwined urban dynamics ie around housing socio-
economic distress a wavering political climate and the need to be more
environmentally conscientious This necessitates focused attention and much
consideration as the political economic social and environmental junctures in which
planning has come to operate has meant that the profession has become
susceptible to external pressures scrutiny and influence (Campbell and Marshall
2002)
64 Conclusion
South Africa has for a number of years into democracy been at a critical time of
limited housing supply and a desperate need for housing (Khan and Thurman 2001)
(Pienaar
2010) Planners have an important role to play in facilitating coordinating and
effecting the reconfiguration of the urban landscape towards improving the setting
of inherently socio-economically ailing spaces such as hostels (Jupp and Inch 2012)
Hostels have largely remained as spaces that have continued to perpetuate
underdevelopment inequality and disempowerment (Khan and Thurman 2001) If
family units are to wholly address the stigma of hostel life and the convoluted nature
Page | 93
of hostels to alter the landscape of hostels and define a novel future for hostels and
their residents It is certain that this will require decisive action collaborative efforts
and the wisdom of retrospection
Page | 94
List of references
African National Congress 1994 The Reconstruction and Development Programme A
policy framework ANC Johannesburg
African National Congress (2003) Briefing note 5 Housing
httpwwwancorgzaelections2004briefingshousingpdf
Albert A and Kramsch O (1999) Space Inequality and Difference lsquoRadical Turns
and lsquoCultural Termsrdquo European Planning Studies 7(1) 77 ndash 79
Bandyopadhyay S and Green E (2008) Nation-building and Conflict in Modern
Africa The Suntory Centre
Barnett C (1999) Broadcasting the Rainbow Nation Media Democracy and Nation-
building in South Africa Editorial Board of Antipode 31 (3) 274-303
Benit-Gbaffou C and Mathoho M (2010) A case study of participation in the City
Deep Hostel Redevelopment Project Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Bonner P and Nieftagodien N (2012) Ekurhuleni the making of an urban region
Wits University Press
Campbell H and Marshall R (2002) Values and professional identities in planning
practice in Allmendinger R And Tewdwr-Jones M (eds) Planning futures new
directions for planning theory London Routledge
Castles S and M J (Millerl (2008) The Age of Migration International Population
Movements in the Modern World New York The Guilford Press
Charlton S et al (2014) From Housing to Human Settlement Evolving Perspectives
South African Cities Network
Chipkin I and Meny-Gibert S (2011) Why the Past matters Histories of the Public
Service in South Africa PARI Short Essays number 1 Johannesburg PARI
Collinson M A and K Adazu (2006) The INDEPTH Network A demographic resource
on migration and urbanisation in Africa and Asia Views on Migration in Sub-Saharan
Africa Proceedings of an African Migration Alliance Workshop C Cross D
Gelderblom N Roux and J Mafukidze Cape Town HSRC Press 159- 172
Page | 95
Collinson M A (2006) Health Impacts of Social Transition A study of Female
Temporary Migration and its impact on Child Mortality in Rural South Africa A
dissertation submitted to the School of Public Health University of the Witwatersrand
in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master in Science in the branch of
Medicine
Cornwall A (2002) Making Spaces Changing Places Situating Participation in
Development Institute of Development Studies IDS Working Paper 170
Creswell J W (2009) Research Design Qualitative Quantitative and Mixed Methods
Approaches 3rd Edition Los Angeles Sage Publications Inc
Demacon 2014 Sethokga hostels mixed typology market analysis market research
Findings and recommendations
Department of Human Settlements Republic of South Africa Programmes and
Subsidies document assessed on 7 July 2015 from
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentspublicationshuman_settlement
s_programmes_and_subsidiespdf
Department of Social Development Republic of South Africa White Paper on
Families in South Africa 2012
Dyiki M (2006) City of Cape Town Integrating Families Hostels to Homes
Redevelopment Programme Presentation
httpswwwwesterncapegovzatext200652006_hostels_presentation-_dyikipdf
Fritz V and Menocal A R (2007) Understanding State-Building from a Political
Economy Perspective An Analytical and Conceptual Paper on Processes
Embedded Tensions and Lessons for International Engagement Report for DFIDrsquos
Effective and Fragile States Teams Overseas Development Institute
Greenberg S and Mathoho M (2010) ldquoConceptual Framework on Public
Participation and Developmentrdquo Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Page | 96
Grieger L et al (2013) Moving Out and Moving In Evidence of Short-Term Household
Change in South Africa from the National Income Dynamics Study
Goldblatt B amp Meintjes S (1996) Gender and the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission a submission to the TRC May
Harrison P And Kahn M (2002) The ambiguities of change the case of the planning
profession in the province of KwaZulu-Natal South Africa in Thornley A and Rydin Y
(eds) Planning in the global era Aldershot Ashgate
Jupp E and Inch A (2012) Planning as a profession in uncertain times Town Planning
Review Vol 83 No 5
Khan F and Thurman S (2001) Setting the Stage Current Housing Policy and
Debate in South Africa Isandla Institute
Liefa Consulting (2015) Maps diagrams source
LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor
report
Mapetla M M (2005) Aspects of urban housing for women and men in Southern
Africa Roma Lesotho National University of Lesotho
Marshall M N (1996) Sampling for qualitative research Family Practice Oxford
University Press
Mosoetsa S (2011) Eating from one pot the dynamics of survival in poor South
African households Johannesburg Wits University Press
Mdunyelwa M L (2015) Public Participation in Hostel Redevelopment Programs in
Nyanga and Langa Dissertation presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in
the Faculty of Arts and Social Science at Stellenbosch University
National Housing Report (2009) -
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentsnational_housing_20092_Techn
ical_General_Guidelines
Netshitenzhe J (2011) A Developmental State South Africarsquos developmental
Capacity UCT Summer School Mapungubwe Institute for Strategic Reflection
Page | 97
Peoples Housing Programme httpwwwjoburg-
archivecozacity_visionannualreport2002-03chapter10pdf
Pienaar J S and Cloete C E (2005) Hostel Conversion as Social Housing in South
Africa Funding Regime VS Real Needs Case Study of the Sethokga Hostel Conversion
Project Pacific Rim Real Estate Society (PRRES)
Pienaar J (2010) Community Residential Units key elements application implications
for Metros Municipal Leadership Housing Forum0
Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the Community Residential Units
Programme 2006
httpwwwgovzaabout-governmentgovernment-programmescommunity-
residential-unit-cru-programme
Ramphele M (1993) A Bed Called Home Life in the Migrant Labour Hostels of Cape
Town Ohio Ohio University Press
Segal L (1991) The Human Face of Violence Hostel dwellers speak In The Journal of
Southern African Studies Vol 18 No 1
SJN Development Planning Consultants (2000) Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial
Development Framework
South African Department of Housing 2008 Community Residential Programme
httpwwwhousinggovzaContentCRUHomehtm
South African Local Government Association
httpwwwsalgaorgzaappwebrootassetsfilesGuidelines20for20Municipalities
Flyer20rental20housing20NMApdf
South African Yearbook 20122013
httpwwwsouthafricanewyorknetconsulateYearbook2020131320Human20S
ettlemp
Statistics South Africa Census (2001) Concepts and Definitions Report
httpswwwStatistics+South+Africa+Census+(2001)+Concepts+and+Definitions+Repo
rt+03-02-26+Version
Thurman S (1997) Umzamo improving hostel dwellersrsquo accommodation in South
Africa Environment and Urbanisation Vol 9 No 2
Page | 98
Urban Sector Network Final Report August 2000 ndash April 2003 Hostel Redevelopment
httppdfusaidgovpdf_docsPdaby792pdf
Van der Berg S (2010) Current poverty and income distribution in the context of
South African history Stellenbosch Economic Working Papers 2210
Von Holdt K (2010) Nationalism Bureaucracy and Developmental State The South
African Case South African Review of Sociology Volume 41 Number 1
Watt A (2012) Essentials of project management
httpopentextbccaprojectmanagement
Ziehl S C (2001) Documenting Changing Family Patterns in South Africa Are Census
Data of any Value African Sociological Review 5(2)
Interviews with key informants
Shibambo Vincent Resident Engineer LTE Consulting Interview 14thAugust 2015
(Sethokga family units project site)
Mthethwa Jabu Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Housing Officer Interview 17
August 2015 (Ekurhuleni Kempton Park Housing Offices)
Mohlapamaswi Ward Councillor ANC Tembisa Ward 4 Interview 18 August 2015
(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers
Sololo Lufefe Ward 4 Economic Development Representative Interview 18 August
2015(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers)
Majikijela Sisa Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlements Sethokga
Hostel Conversion Project Manager Interview 19 August 2015 (Sethokga family units
project site boardroom)
Dyiki Malibongwe Housing Development Agency Official 7 September 2015
(Housing Development Agency head office Killarney Johannesburg)
Bako Simba Liefa Architects Interview 9 September (LTE House Sunninghill
Johannesburg)
Page | 7
While I have always been curious about where and how people live and their
experiences and reality in the places they reside hostels have always intrigued me
This particular focus on hostels also emanates as a result of a particular frustration
within my standing as a scholar with what has continually appeared to me that is to
be this sort of overstretched overemphasis and preoccupation by our post-1994
government with shanty towns This is not to say that I think shanty towns are not a
significant area of concern characterised by some of the worst living conditions and
rightfully so deserve concerted attention and decisive remedial measures According
to Segal (1991) much like hostel dwellers the residents of shantyrsquos form part of the
South African populace who have been amongst the most severely exploited and
disadvantaged (Segal 1991)
In focusing on hostels as a euphemism for single-sex labour compounds one is
confronted with a similarly momentous and multifaceted circumstance As hostels
were and largely still continue to be very much part of the housing crisis in the country
and so this research report will endeavour to cast some light on hostels to
contextualise hostels the hostel conversion approach and the associated stigma of
hostel live within a contemporary South African context
Page | 8
Chapter one Introductory chapter15
1 Introduction15
11 Background to the study17
12 Rationale18
13 Problem statement18
14 Research question and sub-questions19
15 Significance of the study19
16 Aim and objectives of the research20
17 Research methodology20
171 Type of research20
172 What kind of information is needed22
173 Collecting data22
174 Sampling22
175 Ethical considerations23
18 Conclusion24
Chapter two Theoretical backdrop25
2 Introduction25
21 Contextualising hostels26
22 Key concepts theories ideas and arguments27
221 The historic model of hostels the conceptualisation of the hostel system28
222 Migration and the notion of migrant labour labourers as conceived under the
hostel system29
223 The notion of bedhold31
Page | 9
224 The stigma of hostel life31
225 Family versus household configurations32
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing33
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy35
228The role and significance of communitypublic participation in hostel conversion
projects35
23 Conclusion38
Chapter three Introducing Sethokga hostel39
3 Introduction39
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)39
311 Geographic description of the study area41
312 Locality44
313 Local and municipal context45
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel50
321 Built formArchitecture50
322 Municipal services54
323 The adjoining area55
33 Conclusion56
Chapter four The states approach to hostel conversion58
4 Introduction58
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach58
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach59
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme59
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process60
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing61
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised
Housing61
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country62
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme63
44 The Community Residential Units Programme65
45 Conclusion67
Chapter five The Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project68
5 Introduction68
Page | 10
51 Outline of the main components of the project68
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project68
512 Project phases69
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project70
521 Broad vision and aim of the project74
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and
in turn set to address those needs and challenges76
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project77
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful78
53 Visual narrative of the site of the family units79
531Architectural designsplans79
532 The project site of the family units82
533 Inside the family units84
53 Summary of main themes and findings86
54 Conclusion88
Chapter six Concluding chapter89
61 Review and reflections89
62 Limitations of the study91
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners91
64 Conclusion92
List of references94
Page | 11
Pages
Maps
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni
hostel and Vusimuzi hostel40
Map 2 Locality map44
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex45
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework48
Figures
Figure 1 Ground floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 2 First floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 3 Elevation of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 4 Collage of exterior imagery of the hostel50
Figure 5 Collage of interior imagery of the hostel52
Figure 6 Municipal amenities54
Figure 7 The adjoining area55
Figure 8 Community meeting agenda74
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga developmenthelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip76
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development planhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip79
Figure 11 Architects Section F-Fhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figue 12 Architects Section E-Ehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figure 13 South Elevation80
Figure 14 North Elevatonhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip81
Figure 15 East Elevation81
Figure 16 West Elevation81
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site82
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units84
Table
Table 1 Total workforce in the period December 2013 - January 2014 Sethokga
sitehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip72
Page | 12
ANC African National Congress
Cllr Councillor
CRU Community Residential Units
DoHS Department of Human Settlements
EMM Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
GPDHS Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement
HRP Hostel Redevelopment Programme
IDP Integrated Development Plan
IFP Inkatha Freedom Party
MSDF Metropolitan Spatial Development Framework
PWV Pretoria ndash Witwatersrand ndash Vereeniging
RDP Reconstruction and Development Programme
SDF Spatial Development Framework
USAID United States Agency for International Development
USN Urban Sector Network
Page | 13
Chapter one will essentially introduce the research report The aim of this chapter is as
follows highlight the objective of the study provide a background to the study and
also discuss the rationale and problem statement In addition to detailing the
research question the significance of this study and the research methodology will
also be reviewed
Coincidently this research report is written and takes place at a time where there has
been somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms With the prevailing question being ldquoWhat iscontinues to be the
role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo Although this study will not in effect
actively seek to answer that particular question it presents a valuable premise for this
study ldquoFamily units to address the stigma of hostel liferdquo
The main aim of this chapter is to contextualise hostel to position the study within an
expanded theoretical framework The main chapter will in part argue that hostels
have largely remained as urban enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric and
that the rigid structures of regulation and control which were imposed on hostel
dwellers have perpetuated a complex state of affairs The literature review section
which details some of the key concepts theories ideas and arguments on the topic
will elaborate further on this
This chapter aims to provide a comprehensive description of the study area and so it
is in this chapter that the local as well as municipal context of the study area will
altogether be considered The aim of this chapter is to provide the reader with a sort
of lsquofeelrsquo of Sethokga hostel and its present-day circumstance It will attempt to
articulate to the reader the authors own experience and account of the study area
Page | 14
in an effort to provide the reader with a well-versed narrative of the multifaceted
nature of the hostel and the complex reality in which its residents endure
The South African statersquos approach to hostel redevelopment conversion is
discussed It is argued that the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of hostel
redevelopment conversion Chapter four discusses a number of state policy and
approaches addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo Ahead of this however the evolution of the
hostel redevelopment conversion approach is examined which dates back to the
earliest (soon after 1994) efforts by the South African government to remedy the ills of
the hostel system
Chapter five examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seeks to unpack
the conceptualisation of the project This chapter reflects and draws extensively on
the findings of the field work and the invaluable insights offered by the key informants
The main components of the hostel conversion project are examined and the vision
of Sethokga personified by the hostel conversion project is presented in chapter five
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoSo what does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
Page | 15
Introductory chapter
In the wake of the political transition in South Africa in 1994 and for some time
preceding this time frame violence squalor overcrowding and socio-political strife
had long become characteristic of some of the features associated with hostels and
the stigma of hostel life (Thurman 1997) Due to its history as systematically
disempowered yet politically vocal enclaves we have come to know or perhaps be
familiar with hostels as highly contentious and antagonistic environments with a
burdened local identity (Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The stigma of hostel life constitutes among a host of conditions an innate reality
where the residents of hostels inhibit isolated destitute and unbecoming spaces
(Segal 1991) Built as single-sex labour compounds to accommodate African migrant
labourers for the duration of their stay in South Africarsquos white urban areas hostels
occupy a unique position within the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape
(Thurman 1997) As sojourners in South Africarsquos white urban areas the law
constructed a lsquolegalrsquo person called a labourer who was lsquoauthorisedrsquo to temporarily
reside in the urban space but had to retreat to their rural quarters once their lsquoservicersquo
had been concluded (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Thus to draw attention to the
unkindness of their living conditions many hostel dwellers have continued for the
better part of South Africarsquos democracy to lsquochoosersquo physical violence as a tool
perceived to best serve and afford some attention to their troubles (Pienaar and
Crofton 2005)
Within the context of this research report the term hostels widely refer to single-sex
dormitory style labour compounds which emerged in South Africa under the
apartheid system and ideology of separate development (Pienaar and Crofton
2005) The ideology of separate development and the resultant influx control policies
were a distinctive trait of the government of a particular juncture in the countryrsquos
history - a government that as part of its mandate held to discourage the permanent
settlement of the African populace in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) This further
translated itself in the governmentrsquos refusal to plan and consent to any sort of
lsquomeaningfulrsquo investment into areas designated for the other who were primarily
located in the townships on the periphery of the urban terrain (Ramphele 1993)
Page | 16
Badly designed poorly built and suffering many years of neglect hostels were
primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for the comfort of hostel
dwellers (Thurman 1997) Conceivably the hostel system socialised its inhabitants into
an undignified and callous condition which has in some respect persisted and has
unfortunately not wholly been reconciled (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In hostels that
were male occupied hostel dwellers were regarded as lsquomen of four worldsrsquo which
referred to their present and existing life within the hostel the surrounding township(s)
places of work and their rural homes (Segal 1991) The hostel system made it
impossible for hostel dwellers to live in the hostel with their families ie wives
husbands partners children (Segal 1991) This consequence is particularly important
to note at this early stage in the report because of the wisdom and context it adds as
the study progresses
Coincidently this research is written and takes place at a time where there has been
somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms Undoubtedly the prevailing question has been ldquoWhat is should be
the role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo The current Minister of Human
Settlements has said that ldquohostels no longer have a place within South Africarsquos
democratically reconfigured state and so the state needs to get rid of hostelsrdquo (Sisulu
2015) However in a nation such as South Africa efforts towards transition are
ambiguous complex and can often be marked by violence (Mosoetsa 2011)
According to Thurman (1997) of an estimated 604 000 hostel beds around the country
in the late 1990s accommodated whole families relatively close to urban centres
Furthermore Thurman argues that hostels present both a significant challenge and an
opportunity for government NGOs developers and hostel dwellers themselves High
density housing stock stood to gain a considerably large supply of low income
(Thurman 1997) Even while a large number of hostel redevelopmentconversion
projects continue to be riddled with tension and difficulty the prospect(s) for change
and reform that they offer cannot simply be dismissed
This study seeks to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel conversion project to
develop an informed understanding of the defining features and characteristics of
this particular hostel conversion project It examines what is and what has been the
nature of engagement and dialogue between the various stakeholders involved and
discusses the insights they were able to offer to this study In 2015 21 years into South
Page | 17
Africarsquos democracy we have to wonder what is needed to make amends and offset
the dishonour of hostel life
11 Background to the study
We have to understand what the hostel system did was to lsquoaccommodatersquo the
African populace in single-sex labour compounds (Segal 1991) Upon their arrival
their presence in urban areas was constrained as they were met with strict rules and
restrictions (Ramphele 1993) In turn social relations were severally volatile and
ambiguous under the hostel system as hostel dwellers were constrained in their ability
to interact in certain or in their own chosen ways (Thurman 1997) There have been a
number of authors who have noted that the notion of family was partly if not entirely
redefined under this system (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were designed with little or no
thought given of human comfort security and interaction and many are still in
appalling neglected and overcrowded conditions (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) For
many people hostels represent a bitter and hopeless reminder of the past while for
others they are a well prized and affordable shelter in an environment of serve
homelessness (Thurman 1997)
Accordingly soon after 1994 South Africarsquos democratic government made some
attempt to convert hostels into environments suitable for family life although the
extent of this has not entirely been clear (DoHS 2015) This was met with hostility
violence and unwillingness by some hostel dwellers particularly those in the Pretoria
Witwatersrand and Vereeniging (PWV) region to have their hostels
convertedredeveloped into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010) The
violence that had become synonymous with hostel life became an overwhelming
impediment that proved difficult to overcome (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that the idea of an unambiguous constant and unrestricted
presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a point of contention for
some of the men who had far too long become accustomed to living lsquoalonersquo as
men Some expressed unwillingness while others found it a struggle to comprehend or
endorse this change that seemed far too unfamiliar and a challenge to come to
grips with (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Thus in hostels where hostel conversion projects have since taken-off the general
attitudes perceptions and reception of the projects have in some respects continued
to be negative and unwelcomed Scepticism tension and hostility add to the already
complex nature of the hostel conversion projects (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
Page | 18
2010) Hostels are still largely spaces confronted with deep social injustices (ie poor
living conditions a lack of privacy overcrowded) and are an insult to the dignity of
their occupants in several ways as both spatially limited and socio-economically
limiting spaces (Ramphele 1993) The limits imposed by hostels onto hostel dwellers
have persisted in protracting unkindness and a distorted conception of the
fundamental purpose of housing Hostels remain as an unfortunate symbol of a
former governmentrsquos refusal and failure to acknowledge the personhood (the
position and quality of being an individual or having feelings perspectives integrity
and human characteristics needs and wants) of the men and women they housed
(Ramphele 1993)
12 Rationale
Arguably hostel conversion projects and particularly the conceptualisation of these
projects is still a relatively under-researched field Based on my efforts to find
published work on the subject and even though there have been a number of
hostels across the country which have undergone or are undergoing hostel
conversion this remains a rather neglected study field
Hostels within their historic make-up were for the most part premised on fairly uniform
ideals arrangements and gender configurations The demographic setting within
some hostels across the country have since become a lot more fluid and departed
from their former mandatory construct (as strictly single-sex spaces) In what were
predominantly male occupied hostels women and children have since moved into
some of those hostels
Sethokga hostel which will serve as the case study for this research is a hostel that is
still predominantly male occupied but is undergoing hostel conversion to convert the
hostel into family units I believe that the fact that the hostel is still predominantly
male occupied presents an intriguing dimension to this study on hostel conversion
and efforts to grapple with the research question
13 Problem statement
In the case of Sethokga hostel a hostel conversion project is underway but it is not
clear what has sparked such a conversion and to what extent it is driven by the
available policies or assessments of needs or what attempt has been made to meet
these needs Subsequently what would the conversion of a predominantly male
Page | 19
dominated hostel rife with historically inherent conditions necessitate Therefore
how has the conversion project grasped the experience of men within such a hostel
and how has it grasped the concept of family life
14 Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units been conceptualised and
based upon the conceptualised ideas does it address the stigma of hostel life and it
what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What led to the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail What is the broad aim and vision
of the project What is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
15 The significance of the study - positioning the study relative to existing academic
literature
The significance of this research report lies in what I believe is a gap in the scope of
work covered over the years on hostels particularly on hostel conversion projects
Based on my efforts to find published work on the subject questions around what
these projects entail their implications relevance and impact remain unanswered
In the work I have managed to access so far this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects has somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore there needs to be more inquiry and study
conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel conversion
projects
As documented by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) there are vast and intricate
layers of engagement communication participation and even discontentment
Page | 20
involved in hostel conversion projects For instance the legitimacy around where
decision-making lies and which avenues are or should be available to voice
concerns have been some of the challenges relating to hostel conversion and have
added to the already complex nature of these projects
There is most certainly room for a study to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel
conversion project and probe this idea that family units could serve as an adequate
tool for the apt reform of hostels as many of us have come to know them associate
with them or even disassociate from them
16 Aim and objectives of the research
The main aim of this research report is to examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project and how the project has been conceptualised
Objectives
To examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
To develop a more comprehensive understanding of the hostel conversion
approach relative to the socio-economic and political context of the hostel
To explore the possibility and potential of family units as a viable tool to
addressing the stigma of hostel life
To examine how the project has understood the needs and challenges of the
residents and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
To examine the specific spatial focus of the project
17 Research methodology
171 Type of research
The methodology used in the study is a qualitative approach to research and semi-
structured interviews were conducted as the primary means of data collection
Additionally the data collection process involved the use of a variety of sources
which ranged from books journal articles newspaper articles and online media
platforms in the form of articles and radio podcasts
Page | 21
According to Cresswell (2009) this particular method to research (a qualitative
method) entails among other things the use of horizontal dialogue conversation and
the exchange of ideas between the interviewer and the interviewees (Cresswell
2009) Key informants were identified on the basis of their knowledge of andor
involvement in the Sethokga hostel conversion project and the following individuals
were interviewed
1st interviewee Mr Vincent Shibambo resident engineer with LTE consulting (the
company facilitating the construction and administration of the project) Interview
conducted 14th August 2015 at the project site The interview took place in the
boardroom of the project site offices
2nd interviewee Mr Jabu Mthethwa housing officer from the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality Interview conducted 17th August 2015 the interview took place in Mr
Mthethwarsquos office at the council offices in the Kempton Park CBD area
3rd interviewee ANC Ward 4 Tembisa Ward Councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi Interview
conducted 18th August 2015 in the ward councillorrsquos office at the ward councillors
chambers situated adjacent to the project site offices within the vicinity of the hostel
4th interviewee Mr Lufefe Sololo Ward 4 Tembisa Economic Development Rep (Mr
Sololo sits on the ward committee that advises the ward councillor) Interview
conducted 18th of August 2015 at Sethokga hostel
5th interviewee Mr Sisa Majikijela official from the Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlements Mr Majikijela is the current project manager of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project Interview conducted 19th of August 2015 in the boardroom
of the project site offices
6th interviewee Mr Malibongwe Dyiki who was a resident of a hostel in Cape Town in
the early 1980s He then became a community representative in later years and then
moved on to be a government official facilitating hostel redevelopments in the
Western Cape He has written and published on hostels and has also participated in
policy discussions on the Hostel Redevelopment Programme Interview was done on
the 7th of September 2015 at the Housing Development Agencyrsquos head office in
Killarney Johannesburg where he is currently working as the Programme Manager for
the mining towns programme
7th interviewee Simba Bako architect with Liefa Architects (appointed by LTE
consulting Liefa Architects were responsible for the design of the family units)
Page | 22
Interview conducted on the 9th of September 2015 at LTE House in Sunninghill
Johannesburg
172 What kind of information is needed
The kind of information that was needed was information which contextualised the
study area within its broader local and municipal context Pre-existing data
particularly demographic and statistical data on the hostel and its surroundings
Ekurhulenirsquos Integrated Development Plan the Metrorsquos Spatial Development
Framework and information that would give an overview of the geographic social
economic and possibly even the political context of the study area is needed
Moreover project reports studies memorandums or minutes and state policy on
hostel conversion would also be useful
173 Collecting data
In collecting data there were a number of methods and tools that were used which
involved moments of ad hoc discussion and deliberation around the topic What was
invigorating and always thrilling was peoplersquos interest and curiosity regarding this
study The impromptu encounter(s) with people who were open and ready to share
their point of views and experience(s) honestly made the data collection process
that much easier
There was a considerable amount of time spent on examining literature books
articles (both academic and media sources) sources on the internet and journals
Collecting data also involved examining similar programmes and projects on hostel
conversionredevelopment so collecting desktop data and consulting library sources
was an invaluable part of collecting data
174 Sampling
The study sample is important for any research The choice between qualitative
quantitative or even the consideration of using a mixed methods approach should
be determined by the research question and not decided subjectively In grappling
with the research question it seemed most appropriate for the purpose of this study to
make use of a qualitative approach It was believed that a qualitative approach
Page | 23
would provide the necessary framework to respond to the research question and
address the aim and objectives of the study In answering the lsquohowrsquo and lsquowhyrsquo
questions that the study would pose a qualitative approach would engage in a sort
of comprehensive exploration of the many-sided and possibly complex dynamics of
the Sethokga hostel conversion project For this reason a qualitative interview-
centred approach was used (Marshall 1996)
Marshall (1996) argues that there are three broad methods commonly used in
selecting a study sample that is convenience judgement and theoretical sampling
techniques Convenience sampling involves the most accessible person(s) it is the
least time consuming requires the least effort and financing Judgement sampling
also referred to as purposeful sampling is according to Marshall (1996) the most
widely used sampling technique With judgement sampling the researcher
purposefully and actively selects a sample that would best respond to their research
question and in principle convenience is set aside While theoretical sampling
involves a process of selection of a sample that is mainly driven by and rooted in a
theoretical position the sample is selected to examine or elaborate a particular
theory (Marshall 1996)
For the purpose of this study the judgemental sampling technique was used and this
entailed the active and purposeful selection of what Marshall refers to as lsquosubjectsrsquo
with particular expertise ie key informants The sample selection was based on my
prior experience and practical knowledge of the study area The limitation however
was that there were quite a number of elaborate and contentious issues at play
which within the limits of this study could not be explored at length on account of
time constraints and the particular focus of this study
175 Ethical considerations
As a young female scholar entering into a rather conflicted lsquotoughrsquo and culturally-
laden environment I was faced with what was an apparent concern for safety and
so on my trips to the hostel I was always accompanied by my father or a friend
Initially my intention was to interview some of the hostel residents but the sensitivities
around the harshness of their living conditions were highlighted as a possible area of
vulnerability and the spate of xenophobia attacks particularly in and around hostels
suggested reconsideration As a researcher I ensured that the participants were all
Page | 24
well aware and informed that their participation was voluntary and they were at
liberty to withdraw their involvement at any stage The interviewees were informed of
the choice to remain anonymous if they wished and that the information they shared
would be used to develop this research report Thus my ethical obligation as a
researcher was to ensure that I did minimal harm and unintentional damage through
my research that I conducted myself responsibly and professionally at all times and
that I reported accurately what I found including unforeseen and even negative
findings
18 Conclusion
Hostels consolidated the migrant labour system They served not only to control the
number of black labour residing in urban areas but also to manage its behaviour As
hostels were designed to be unattractive and uncomfortable many comparisons
have been made between hostels and institutions such as army barracks and prisons
There is a window of opportunity in promoting hostel conversion but injecting
resources into previously marginalised communities have resulted and is resulting in
conflict local power struggles and competition for those resources (Thurman 1997)
The next chapter will discuss the theoretical backdrop of this study and elaborate on
key concepts theories ideas and arguments that have been of particular relevance
to unpacking the research question
Page | 25
Theoretical backdrop
2 Introduction
It is imperative at this point to contextualise the term hostels so as to clearly il lustrate
what is meant by it This section of the report will contextualise the term hostels and it
will examine key concepts theories ideas and arguments that are of particular
relevance to the study
Furthermore chapter two argues that hostels have largely remained as urban
enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
It argues that the rigid structures of regulation and control that were imposed upon
the former inhabitants of hostels were essentially just one part of a multi-faceted and
disconcerting circumstance that has continued to live on within a large number of
hostels (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012) This view that hostels operated and in some
respect continue to operate under a complex set of circumstances is shared and
supported by the work of authors such as Segal (1991) Ramphele (1993) Goldblatt
and Meintjes(1996) Thurman (1997) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) Dyiki (2006) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) Subsequently some of their work will be used to
unpack the research question and draw on certain aspects that resonate with the
case study The following abridged abstract describes some of the complexities
around hostels and the views captured in the work of some of the authors mentioned
above
According to Segal (1991) hostel life and the regulations imposed upon hostel
dwellers made it extremely difficult to maintain family life that is men would leave
their families in the rural areas for long periods of time to find work in the city
Ramphele (1993) notes that the families of the men would then became reliant for
their survival upon the remittance of the men Mapetla (2005) makes a compelling
argument that suggests that within contemporary society men are traditionally
culturally and even spiritually still regarded as the head the protector and provider of
their families even as the lines delineating the roles of men and women within
contemporary society have become faint and more fluid Arguably hostels still exist
within a highly complex setting (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Page | 26
21 Contextualising hostels
Generally hostels were badly designed poorly built and many have been suffering
years of neglect (Thurman 1997) Hostels were primarily built to accommodate
African migrant workers for the containment of their labour over the duration of their
stay in what were demarcated as South Africarsquos white urban areas (Thurman 1997)
There are notably three types of hostels namely public sector private sector and
grey sector hostels (Ramphele 1993)
Public sector hostels are hostels that were built and managed by provincial or local
authorities and mainly accommodated workers across a range of sectors (Ramphele
1993) Private sector hostels were built by private sector enterprise to house private
sector labourers who would mainly be working in the factories and mines (Pienaar
and Crofton 2005) Grey sector hostels were built on public sector-owned land by the
private sector under some form of contractual agreement with a government
authority (provincial or local) but were largely managed and controlled by private
sector employers (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Public and grey sector hostels were
generally situated in the townships (Thurman 1997) However when they were
planned these hostels were generally located on the outskirts of the cities but with
increased urban growth they now relatively tend to be more centrally situated
(Thurman 1997)
Ramphele (1993) argued that each hostel had a distinct form and quality about it
Elements of tribalism certain customs systems of belief and association dimensions of
conflict and conflict resolution were not homogeneous across all hostels (Ramphele
1993) The type of work that the migrant labourers did across the sectors they worked
was often rudimentary It ranged from unskilled to very basic semi-skilled work and it
was quite labour intensive in return for meagre earnings (Ramphele 1993)
Historically hostels were characterised by two main geographic classifications firstly
hostels in the backdrop of an urban context (ie also referring to inner city hostels)
and secondly hostels in the areas around mines (Segal 1991) According to Segal
(1991) urban context hostels had a more diffused grouping of hostel dwellers than
their mining counterparts (Segal 1991) Hostels in urban context developed broader
and somewhat complex relations with the outside community This contrasted with
the extreme isolation of hostel dwellers in hostels around the mines Therefore hostels
in the urban context were to a lesser extent conceived to be lsquomore openrsquo and lsquoless
strictly controlledrsquo However both were essentially sites of control and exploitation
Page | 27
with clearly marked physical boundaries in form of high walls and fences with single
and restricted entry and exit points (Segal 1991)
Hostels in urban areas had government bureaucracies responsible for their
management and maintenance as opposed to a single employercompany (Segal
1991) Moreover hostels in the urban context accommodated a wider and more
diverse range of workers who did not necessarily work for the same
employercompany or have uniform working hours or shifts In urban hostels ethnicity
was not the official organiser of hostel dwellers as men from different backgrounds
and homelands would and could share rooms (Ramphele 1993) Lastly and perhaps
the most important distinguishing feature of the two was the fact that hostels in urban
areas were not under the extensive force of lsquototal controlrsquo as was the experience of
mining hostel dwellers (Segal 1991 Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
According to Pienaar and Crofton (2005) public sector hostels accommodated the
largest number of hostel dwellers Overall the quality of living environment of hostels
was generally poor but this was particularly bad in public sector hostels (Ramphele
1993) Additionally the administrative processes and management of public sector
hostels was under dire strain as no clear records of those that lived in the hostels or
those entering and exiting the hostel were kept (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that although private sector hostels were considered to be
better managed and maintained The general state of all hostels whether public or
privately owned was largely characterised by poor living conditions a lack of
privacy the sharing of very limited spaces a distressed local context and
overcrowded conditions (Ramphele 1993) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) further note
that around the early 1980s hostel residents simply started to withdraw from payment
of rentals and thus the maintenance of the hostels grew even thinner and steadily
non-existent Public sector hostels grew especially financially and politically
unmanageable (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
22 Key concepts theories ideas and arguments
To unpack the research question and contextualise the study within a broader
theoretical framework this section of the report will discuss and draw on a number of
concepts theories ideas and arguments
Page | 28
221 The historic model of hostels the conceptualisation of the hostel system
In grappling with the historic model of the hostel system this section of the report will
discuss two main themes The conceptualisation of the hostel system and migration
migrant labour as conceived under the hostel system It illustrates the effect hostels
have had on shaping the lives and experiences of their inhabitants in unique and
complex ways (Thurman 1997)
South Africa is a country marked by a legacy of systematic discrimination and the
deliberate disempowerment of a lsquocategoryrsquo of its population (Thurman 1997) Hostels
were established supported and perpetuated by methodical policy frameworks and
brute controls to discourage the permanent settlement of the in historically lsquowhite
areasrsquo (Segal 1991) Thurman (1997) argues that hostels occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are symbolic of three centuries of
systematic racial discrimination
Seemingly ignited by and originating in the mining industry in the nineteenth century
the construction of hostels reached a peak during the 1960s and 1970s in the period
that has been referred to as the ldquogrand apartheidrdquo years (Thurman 1997) They were
built as single-sex dormitory compounds to accommodate African migrant labourers
as sojourners in what were delineated as white urban areas (Ramphele 1993) In
hostels which were intended strictly for male migrant labourersrsquo job-seeking by
African women was criminalised and a deliberate policy not to provide family
housing was pursued (Ramphele 1993)
Common to hostels was the blurring and hostility of the boundaries between the
hostel dwellers place(s) of work and their living spaces (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) In
turn some authors have argued that hostels in some sense functioned as a lsquototal
institutionrsquo According to Segal (1991) and Ramphele (1993) geographically many
hostels were isolated and situated literally at the edges of urban areas and society in
general They were primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for
human comfort safety or enrichment (Thurman 1997) The heavy-handedness of the
hostel system imposed a cunning inferiority complex a sense of no escape yet quite
interestingly a later unwillingness and indifference to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have
their hostel converted into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Ramphele (1993) and Segal (1991) make a rather compelling argument and share
the view that the behaviour and conduct of some of the hostel dwellers against
Page | 29
having their hostel converted into family units is indicative of similar behaviour and
actions displayed by long-term prisoners and people contained in barracks They
argue that a substantial number of long-term inmates would in some instances
display great unwillingness and some difficulty to the prospect of re-entering society
after being socialised into a total institution a reformatory (Ramphele 1993 and
Segal 1991) According to a text by Statistics South Africa (2001) an institution can be
defined as a communal place of residence for persons with common characteristics
(Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001) One could then argue
that one of the common characteristics shared by many hostels was the migrant
labourer status attributed to them (Dyiki 2006)
222 Migration and the notion of migrant labour labourers as conceived under the hostel
system
Castles and Miller (2008) argues that all through time and space individuals and
families have been migrating and doing so for a number of reasons Universally the
migration lsquophenomenonrsquo was and has been as a result of varying factors and in
response to certain causes and events such as demographic growth environmental
changes development vs underdevelopment and the seeking of lsquobetterrsquo
opportunities (Castles and Miller 2008) Others have turned to migration to seek jobs
often located or perceived to be concentrated in larger urban centres (Collinson
and Adazu 2006 Castles and Miller 2008)
Migration can occur as a voluntary or forced process This study is particularly
interested in the event of migration that becomes forced migration when the
circumstances of individuals and families leave them little or no choice but to pursue
lsquohopersquo away from their native home-base (Castles and Miller 2008) Arguably this was
characteristic of the hostel model Hostels enabled mines and later other industries to
suppose and cause that hostel dwellers had homes in rural areas (Collinson 2006)
Seemingly the rural populace was the lsquodesiredrsquo workforce ushered into the city and
mines and exploited as labourers for the development of the urban-based economy
(Thurman 1997)
According to Thurman (1997) the residents of hostels were typically considered as
rural traditionalists and lsquodangerousrsquo outsiders by the residents of townships which
surrounded the hostel Their physical as well as social isolation meant that they often
retained strong links with their rural home-base (Segal 1991) This involved the
Page | 30
periodic movement of individual household members between the hostel and their
rural homes (Thurman 1997) The ruralurban linkages which were subsequently
fashioned became a distinguishing feature of not just hostel dwellers but the black
African populace and as a part of their experience of urban life (Collinson and
Adazu 2006) The costly urban world was thus considered by many as merely a place
of work (Segal 1991 and Ramphele 1993)
This type of migration - also often referred to as lsquocircularrsquo or lsquooscillatingrsquo migration -
became characteristic of a sort of temporary sentiment to life and living in the city
(Dyiki 2006) Additionally the events of circular migration presented certain
household dynamics and challenges in maintaining the often faint links between the
migrant and the households family left behind (Collionson 2006 Ramphele 1993)
Conceivably hostel dwellers have for a long time had a common rural orientation
(Segal 1991) ldquoIt has been repeatedly demonstrated that migrants do not leave
behind the countryside in their journey to the cityrdquo and this rural consciousness has
remained central to the migrant labour population (Segal 1991 9)
Within contemporary society the concept of lsquothe new economies of labour
migrationrsquo has emerged as an alternative position and argues that migration can be
and has become a household strategy (Collinson and Adazu 2006) According to
Collinson and Adazu (2006) within their analysis of contemporary migration patterns
migration has now largely become something that is purposefully chosen by
members of a household family This phenomenon involves the temporary migration
of some individuals within the household family in pursuit of opportunities towards
the collective betterment of the family household or even their broader community
(Collinson and Adazu 2006) Under this model of migration family and community
networks are considered to play an important and supporting role in facilitating
migration between urban-based and village-based households families (Collinson
and Adazu 2006) What is then required of the migrant is thatheshe reciprocate the
initial support offered by hisher household family community as received in hisher
rural-base (Collinson and Adazu 2006)
While in some respect migration is becoming a lsquolonged-forrsquo process and somewhat of
a deliberate choice on the other hand adverse circumstances force families
households to partake in this process as a means of survival (Collinson and Adazu
2006) The ability of migrants to maintain both an urban and rural residence in
whatever context ie historic or contemporary continues to present a social
geographic and economically complex state of affairs (Pienaar and Crofton (2005)
Page | 31
223 The notion of bedhold
The context of hostels designed to be uncomfortable and uninviting the closest
likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo was in the form of a bed Every aspect of life and
survival in hostels revolved around a bed (Ramphele 1993) According to Ramphele
(1993) this in turn perpetuated a circumstance of lsquoclientelismrsquo and blurred the lines of
patronage when it came to the exchanging of the membership of beds and when
beds were to be allocated or reallocated (Ramphele 1993) The ill-defined and fluid
relationship of patronage between bed-holders would in some respect function like
and resemble households (Ramphele 1993 Segal 1991 Mosoetsa 2011)
In some sense bed-holders assumed an intermediary role and served an informal
function as lsquolandlordsrsquo thus as proprietors of the bedhold (Ramphele 1993) Hostel
dwellers became lsquobed-holdersrsquo rather than lsquohouse-holdersrsquo in the urban space
(Segal 1991) It became unduly problematic that the bed was the only space over
which they could have any measure of control It after all distorted the perceptions
hostel dwellers developed of themselves in relation to their environment constraining
them to varying degrees (Ramphele 1993) Ramphele (1993) argues that the limits set
by physical space in hostels also defined in very clear terms the inside versus the
outside security versus insecurity family versus non-family and urban versus rural She
further argues that onersquos very identify in the hostel and their lsquolegal existencersquo in the
urban space depended on their attachment to a bed (Ramphele 1993) According
to Ramphele (1993) the bed acted as a sort of mediator thus lsquoa go-betweenrsquo the
hostel dwellers and the rest of society to which they remain somewhat disconnected
and possibly indifferent (Ramphele 1993)
224 The stigma of hostel life
The stigma of hostel life gave a rather conspicuous meaning to lsquoblack urban lifersquo and
their experience(s) of life in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were badly
designed poorly built and many suffer years of neglect (Thurman 1997) There have
been a number of authors who have argued that hostel dwellers suffered a great
injustice to their humanity their perception of self constrained relations with others
and a constant struggle to maintain family networks with their often rural-base
(Goldblatt and Mentjies 1996)
Page | 32
The living conditions in hostels have been expressed in basic terms as shocking
disgusting inhumane cruel and intolerable by both scholars and residents of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Hostel accommodation is undesirable both aesthetically and
conceptually and there are a number of common features which characterise most
hostels a lack of privacy overcrowded and poor living conditions very limited space
and a serious state of disrepair (Ramphele 1993) Failing to delineate private
personal space the purpose of hostels was to ensure a compliant labour force (Segal
1991)
According to Ramphele (1993) hostels represent physical space that is not only
limited but is also limiting Ramphele makes a distinction between the circumstance
and living arrangements of hostel dwellers and township residents Arguing that
although physical overcrowding of sleeping accommodation between the two
(hostel dwellers and township residents) many not be much different in terms of the
ratio of people to roomsbeds (Ramphele 1993) For township residents it is most likely
that they would be sharing these limited facilities with kin or friends rather than
complete strangers (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of hostels some men
women may adapt too well to living in single-sex hostels and would find change too
difficult to cope with (Ramphele 1993)
225 Family versus household configurations
The terms family and household are not necessarily synonymous According to the
Department of Social Development (2012) ldquoa household comprises of either (i) a
single person who makes provision(s) for hisher food or other essentials for living or (ii)
a group of at least two or more people living together who make common provision
for their food and other essentialsrdquo (White Paper on Families in South Africa 2012 11)
Moreover the Department notes that a household can contain a family yet the
members of the household are not always necessarily a family further remarking that
ldquoa household performs the functions of providing a place of dwelling and the sharing
of resources and these functions can be performed among people who are related
by blood or people without any such relationshiprdquo (White Paper on Families in South
Africa 2012 11) This distinction of family and household configurations is useful to this
study for two main reasons (a) as it has been suggested that one of the broad aims of
the hostel conversion approach is to introduce facilitate lsquofamily lifersquo and to inject a
family quality into these historically single-sex environments (b) Is it then supposed by
the Sethokga hostel conversion project that the household configurations in the
hostel are at present existing wholly in the absence of family configurations
Page | 33
It is important to be mindful of the fact that with time households have become
more complex and family structures more diffused (Mosoetsa 2011) Hostel dwellers
through years of living under space constraints and in single-sex accommodation
have developed certain ideologies practices and habits (Thurman 1997) Arguably
the hostel system redefined and reshaped family and household configurations and
constructed a complex social setting (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of male
occupied hostels relationships among men are characterised by hierarchy and
Ramphele (1993) notes that this is legitimised by lsquotraditionrsquo and is based on age
differences The older men are more likely to occupy positions of authority and be
regarded as the lsquoheadsrsquo of the household and in authority to organise the affairs of
the household Whereas the younger men would be cast in the role of attending to
duties considered lsquotypicalrsquo to women and that is the upkeep of the household ie
cleaning cooking In this lsquomanrsquos worldrsquo tradition and age regulate the day-to-day
function of the household (Ramphele 1993) The links between the men and the
families they had have left behind has arguably become increasingly scant and
incoherent (Grieger et al 2013) With the blurring of their lsquobindingrsquo reciprocal
obligations and support the conception of family life was redefined and put under
considerable strain as a result of migrant labour laws and the criminalisation of job-
seeking activity in urban areas of their rural wives partners (Segal 1991)
In both family and household configurations shared obligations and mutual support
takes many forms (Mapetla 2005) The family structure is perceived to be the
lsquocommander and regulator of the activities and conduct of the individual members
The family structure has been set apart from a household in that a household is more
of a residential unit where related andor none-related individuals in a sense lsquoeat
from the same potrsquo (Mosoetsa 2011) In some cases the individuals and members of
a household provide themselves jointly with food andor other essentials however a
household can also consist of a person who lives alone The distinguishing feature is
that a family configuration consists of people individuals who have a blood-kin
connection and this can include immediate and extended relatives but the same
does not necessarily always hold true for household configurations (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005 Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001)
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing
South Africa can still somewhat be regarded as a traditionally patrilineal society
where land and property are traced through the male lineage where upon marriage
Page | 34
a woman is required to leave her native home to reside with her husband at his home
(Mapetla 2005) This system has been more inclined to empower men (Ziehl 2001)
Subsequently within contemporary society and within the lsquonew politics of gender
relationsrsquo property and land ownership have since become a highly contentious
subject Therefore the issue of housing is quite a significant one and warrants some
reflection particularly the aspect of men and housing (Mapetla 2005)
Gender roles have steadily been changing and are increasingly becoming ill-defined
(Ziehl 2001) So how can or rather how should housing projects and interventions
such as hostel conversion projects be more gender sensitive inclusive representative
and reflective of the changing gender roles both in a social and spatial sense
Gender considerations regarding housing and housing projects need to be mindful of
the innate differentiation between men and women and their not always uniform
needs and interaction(s) with space (Mapetla 2005) The often male bias when it
comes to access to housing might just further be perpetuated through hostel
conversion projects The question here is then does this new conception of a
reconfigured living environment in the form of family units make provision(s) towards
addressing any of the housing-related gender biases What do these projects
consider important in terms of gender issues if at all how have these issues been
factored into the projects
Gender and housing related theory has often argued strongest the case of women in
their inability to access housing land the law and related funding (Ziehl 2001) The
issues of gender relations and access to housing have become increasingly topical
(Mosoetsa 2011) Womenrsquos rights access to the law resources and social amenities
have been areas which have gained a significant amount of traction in both policy
and academic circles owing to historically discriminatory laws (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005) However in South Africa and perhaps this is true for many other
societies traditionally culturally and even spiritually men are still to a significant extent
regarded as the head of household the foremost provider for their families (Mapetla
2005)
Within the context of hostels migrant labour laws which also made it a point that the
remuneration of its African labour workforce was as horrendous as the conditions they
lived in shaped a particular aspect of menrsquos relation to housing in the urban context
and their experiences (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In a study conducted by Segal
(1991) a group of men living in a hostel were interviewed to give their account of life
in the hostel According to Segal (1991) it became apparent that the men tolerated
the hostel because they felt humiliated by even the thought of losing their roles as the
Page | 35
provider for their family Some men suggested that they could and would not bring
their wives or children to the hostel for even a brief visit (Segal 1991) In their minds
they were better off alone in the citymine because the burden of their own survival
was already enormous (Segal 1991)
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy
Large sections of the South African state have continued to be institutionally
ineffective unsustainable and dysfunctional (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert 2011) Post-
1994 efforts towards nation-building and state formation in the country have taken
many forms a unitary state the inauguration of a new president of the Republic of
South Africa and the promulgation of the 1996 Constitution of the Republic(Barnet
1999) Furthermore the ideals of nation building and state formation would attempt
to diffuse into a sound and convergent form what was once opposite and adverse
(von Holdt 2010)
The housing deficit in the country was and has continued to be one of the greatest
challenges facing the government particularly the inadequate provision and access
to housing for the black majority who had been rendered destitute and occupying
dreadful accommodation (Thurman 1997) In what could better be regarded as
temporary disaster relief areas than housing suitable for any human to call lsquohomersquo
(Ramphele 1993) Post-apartheid bureaucratic inefficiency class formation
redundant budgetary rituals antagonistic attitudes towards public service vocation
and authority has greatly stifled service delivery imperatives ie social housing
provision (von Holdt 2010) Undoubtedly the role of policy towards addressing issues
such as housing and service delivery is a significant one (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert
2011) this will be discussed further in chapter four
228 The role and significance of community public participation in hostel conversion to
family unitrsquos projects
Public participation in any context is a complex and at times a contentious exercise
Academic literature on community public participation tends to presuppose an
experience or existence of informal unambiguous or authentic relations in
community participation processes (Mdunyelwa 2015) This particularly in housing
related projects and programmes with the assumption that if all the stakeholders
involved are consulted the process of participation is likely to yield positive results and
success (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) In South Africa the notion of public
Page | 36
community participation has gained popularity as a democratic practice essential
for development and nation-building (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their research project entitled ldquoA
Case Study of participation in the City Deep Hostel Redevelopmentrdquo suggests that
there are more complex and less diffused forces at play According to Benit-Gbaffou
and Mathoho (2010) the central question often becomes when and at what point
can one say people have effectively or meaningfully participated This question is
especially relevant and significance to hostel conversion projects and to efforts to re-
configure hostels as lsquofamily units suitable for family lifersquo (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010) According to state policy the hostel conversion redevelopment approach is
and has been a nation-wide intervention initiated by the post-1994 government to
redevelop convert hostels in efforts to de-stigmatise these historically-laden spaces
(Dyiki 2006) Moreover the current Minister of Human Settlement has of late stated
on a number of media platforms the hostel conversion approach also seeks to
rehabilitate these historically single-sex migrant labour compounds into family
apartmentsunits to promote a family-oriented setting (Sisulu 2015) According to a
2001 text by Statistics South Africa ldquoconverted or upgraded hostels should be treated
in the same way as a block of flats and each unit considered as a separate housing
unitrdquo (Statistics South Africa Census2001 3)
The importance and usefulness of public community participation in hostel
conversion projects have been a widely and overly debated topic However this
does not wholly take away from the fact that there are many and varied obstacles
and challenges when it comes to the actual practice and experience of
participation on the ground (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) Even while the political
and socio-economic contexts of every project are varied with different structures and
the coordination of stakeholders take on different forms (Mdunyelwa 2015) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) argue that participation has often become a political
process riddled in processes of negotiation and rampant differences of opinion
coupled with a mix of personal andor political ambitions (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010)
Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their study of the City Deep Hostel
Redevelopment Project outlined a number of issues which the project encountered
before during and after the hotel redevelopment project there included
Page | 37
Before the redevelopment process
Managing change while also trying to mitigate violence the unauthorised
occupation of tenants wanting to gain the benefits of the redevelopment project
and the allocation of units (as a contentious challenge) were cited as challenges
encountered before the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
During the process
Challenges around the design of the units (limitations and constraints with respect to
skills time and finances) the issue of labour the provision of public and social
facilities services (ie cregraveches play areas for the children) were cited as being
encountered during the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
Issues after the project
Tariff rates (with electricity as one of the biggest concerns) along with the
disagreement and discontentment around rental payments were cited as the
challenges which were encountered post the hostel redevelopment process A
central question and concern that arose focused on whether the hostel did not just
became a renovated workersrsquo hostel or if it actually did change into actual family
units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
With the study area for this research in mind I am left wondering if the issues identified
by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) are unique to the City Deep contextproject
or are they to some extent representative and reverberate to the broader
challenges and limitations of hostel conversion projects across the country Certainly
there is some value to participation when it comes to hostel conversion
redevelopment but the process of participation particularly within the context of
hostels as politically and socio-economically volatile environments will most likely be
confronted by sturdy issues of inherent sensitivities and nuances (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010) This is what Mdunyelwa (2015) decisively refers to as binary cultural
political and social structures alluding to the sentiment that some hostel dwellers are
in some respect men and women of two minds set free from the physical shackles of
oppression yet still sadly unable and ill-equipped to live and transform their thinking
well beyond that (Mdunyelwa 2015)
Page | 38
23 Conclusion
Typically the body of work that exists on hostels is unambiguously and largely
concentrated on the historically-laden context of hostels It especially articulates
issues of violent conflict and tension within hostels and their surrounding areas
Conflict situations are often captioned as hostel versus township lsquowarsrsquo There is an
important political backdrop to this which relates to the rural urban links made
mention of in this chapter
Furthermore the poor living conditions of hostels the inadequate provision of services
and social amenities should be considered The loss of family life and the sense that
hostels pose as limited spaces which is a negative reflection on to dignity of its
inhabitants are some of elements associated with the stigma of hostel life (Bonner
and Nieftagodien 2012 Ramphele 1993) This has to quite a significant extent
remained a present-day and associated reality of the hostel setting and has posed
vast challenges to hostel conversion redevelopment projects
This chapter has argued that the landscape of hostels has by and large remained
complex at times perplexing and highly contentious As a resultant the wicked
consequences of the hostel system have been many and varied but all of which
warrant due attention The theoretical backdrop on hostels has been useful in
developing themes that resonate with the case study Sethokga hostel Of particular
relevance to the case study will be role and significance of community public
participation in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Highlighting some of the
issues encountered before and during the project as the project has not yet been
completed Certain aspects of the discussion on key concepts theories arguments
and ideas and how they resonate with the case study will be explored further
Particularly the notion of bedhold the aspect of men and housing the stigma of
hostel life and the resultant consequences of the hostel system will be critically
discussed in chapter five which examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project
Page | 39
Introducing Sethokga hostel
3 Introduction
In addition to the study area this chapter will in greater detail describe and locate
Sethokga hostel It examines its local as well as municipal context and presents a
visual narrative of the hostel The aim of the visual narrative is to provide the reader
with a lsquosensersquo of the physical setting of the hostel thus to provide the reader with a
visual depiction of the multifaceted circumstance of the hostel and the complex
challenges in which its residents endure Chapter three largely seeks to provide the
reader with an impression of the context in which the Sethokga hostel conversion
project is taking place
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)
In the period between 1890 and the late 1920s Ekurhuleni (at the time referred to as
the East Rand region of the Transvaal Province) experienced increased numbers of
black male workersmigrants This was as a result of a surge in the gold mining sector
which took place on the Witwatersrand gold reefs (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
According to Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) of the 15 000 workers that were
employed in the sector some 5 000 worked in what is now called the Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality With time the number of workers in the Ekurhuleni area
continued to rise considerably most of who were oscillating migrants who were either
accommodated in labour compounds such as hostels or shanty settlements in
townships across Ekurhuleni such as Tembisa Duduza Tsakane Kwa-Thema and so
forth (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) also argue that for most of the period of the
booming mining sector in the Witwatersrand reef to well into the countryrsquos
democratic dispensation political contention in hostels had long been a common
feature throughout the region As a consequence hostels and a number of the
townships in Ekurhuleni have somewhat continued to exist within a circumstance of
deep-seated antagonistic political and socio-economic conditions (Bonner and
Nieftagodien 2012)
Sethokga hostel is one of the largest hostels in the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan region
according to the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis Study in 2014 there
Page | 40
were approximately 12 120 residents living in the hostel (Demacon 2014) Of that
roughly 4 000 have since the beginning of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
been relocated or reallocated within other blocks in the hostel to make way for the
construction of the family units (Demacon 2014) Some of the relocations of residents
have been to alternative sites outside the hostel to either Enhlanzeni hostel or
Vusimuzi hostel both situated in the Tembisa area (Demacon 2014)Interestingly
Enhlanzeni as well as Vusimizi hostels are also experiencing issues of overcrowding
poor living conditions and similar socio-economic conditions to Sethokga Moreover
neither Enhlanzeni nor Vusimuzi hostel have or are undergoing upgrading
conversion It was not clear in the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis
Study what the reasons for relocating the residents of Sethokga to these hostels were
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni hostel and
Vusimuzi hostel
Source Demacon 2014
Page | 41
311 Geographic description of the study
Sethokga hostel was built in 1980 and much like other hostels across the country the
Sethokga hostel was badly designed poorly built and has been suffering years of
neglect Sethokga hostel is a public sector type hostel and is owned by the
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Sethokga was built to accommodate male
migrant labourers from a range of industries (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Similar to
numerous other hostels men could live in the hostel so long as they had work in
industries but wives partners and families were prohibited from residence (Thurman
1997) They were entitled only to short-term visiting permits Regular and violent raids
which were carried out by authorities during the day and at night would rigorously
enforce these regulations to chase away arrest or bus back the wives partners and
families of the men back to the homelands (Thurman 1997)
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi initially the hostel
accommodated a lsquomixturersquo of residents black men across all tribes and ethnicities
but he recalls the change that occurred in the 1990s in response to political shifts He
recalls that ldquoafter the release of Mandela and when they started preaching lsquothis
thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions happened according to who was Zulu or
Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Below the ward
councillor explains what he saw as some of the factors that led to what is currently
the strong predominance of Pedi and Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel
suggesting that ldquoThere were mixed feeling when talks were rife concerning
negotiations that could lead to possible elections because the IFP (Inkatha Freedom
Party) was rejecting such a notion At the time it was a situation of the Zulursquos terrorizing
the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa and standing with the white man The
Zulursquos did not like such an idea which caused a divide among the Zulu and Xhosa
This led to conflict between the Xhosa and the Zulu There was fighting everywhere in
the country and you found some Pedis Venda and Tsongarsquos ran away from certain
hostels because they were being chased out and some landed up in Sethokga (
Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) The points made by Cllr Mohlapamaswi flag some
interesting points for instance that this hostel in some respect played the role of a
place of refuge and might affect how residents view it
Sethokga hostel is situated on approximately 22 hectares of land and consists of 29 U-
shaped single and two storey dormitories but mainly consists of the two storey walk-up
dormitories (Demacon 2014) The hostel lies on medium dolomitic soil despite this it
has been said and reported that over the years this has not had a significant impact
Page | 42
on much of the structural qualities of the hostel (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) The
structural sturdiness of the hostel is said to have been mitigated through precautions
such as drainage and the assembly of lsquowellrsquo positioned pavements (Demacon 2014)
According to the ward councillor there are a few women and children living in the
hostel although it is not quite clear how many They are however not recognised as
lsquolegitimatersquo residence of Sethokga (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Arguably a
number of the hostel redevelopment conversion projects that have taken place
across the country have been as a response to the prevailing presence of women
and children who had come to live in the hostel The fact that this hostel has
remained predominantly male occupied presents a number contextual dimensions
to the hostel conversion project This will be explored in chapter five which will
examine the conceptualisation of the hostel conversion project
According to Thurman (1997) it is not uncommon in hostels for up to three families to
live in one room measuring 20 square metres Such rooms were designed to
accommodate two to three workers or even up to twenty people to share a sink a
shower and toilet (Thurman 1997) Yet lsquowholersquo families ie husbands wives children
or extended families have not moved into Sethokga Overcrowding remains a
concern and privacy is scarce in the hostel (Demacon 2014) The dormitories have
very limited physical space and little room for manoeuvre The typical floor plan of a
hostel is provided on the next page and depicts the rigid rudimentary and restrained
design of the hostel compound Sethokga hostel has identical floor plans and
elevations
Page | 43
Floor plan of a typical dormitory compound
Source Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
Figure 1 Ground Floor Plan
Figure 2 First Floor Plan
Figure 3 Elevation
Page | 44
312 Locality
The hostel is situated in the East Rand region of the Gauteng province within the
municipal administrative jurisdiction of the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (EMM)
in the Kempton Park ndash Tembisa Customer Care Area It is located in the north-eastern
region region B of the EMM in the township of Tembisa and lies to the south of the
Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and to the east of the City of Johannesburg
Moreover the hostel is lies between the Kempton Park Pretoria railway link near
Oakmoor station thus a multipurpose and inter-as well as intra-regional public
transport node It is well serviced in terms of public transport and easily accessible
from the R21 (Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
Map 2 Locality map
Source Google maps 2015
Source EkurhuleniGIS 2015
Page | 45
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex
313 Local and municipal context
Tembisa is one of the largest townships in the metro and it is situated in region A of the
EMM towards the north-western end of the municipality The hostel lies in ward four of
the metro to the east of Midrand and to the west of one of the most affluent suburbs
in region A Glen Marais along with other high income areas such as Serengeti Golf
Estate Midstream and the suburb of Edenvale (Demacon 2014)
The Integrated Development Plan (IDP) for the Oakmoor area Area 19 of the metrorsquos
Local Integrated Development Plan (LIDP) was last prepared in 2000 The report
contained among its leading aims to establish an integrated framework to guide and
facilitate development interventions in the area (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000) It was documented in the report that the SDP would guide the
Page | 46
municipalityrsquos decisions in the development and management of the area in a way
that the report articulates as follows by encouraging and setting the framework for
private sector investment and initiatives and by seeking to strengthen economic
activity in the area through the identification of specific projects and programmes
which would kick-start development and lastly working towards improving service
delivery (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) The report reviews the
historically context of the area and argues that basically no provision was made for
service delivery or the adequate management of land and no consideration of land
use imperatives was given This was the case throughout the Tembisa Township (SJN
Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Furthermore the report established that the general land-use pattern across most of
the township was mainly comprised of residential developments It was in this 2000
Integrated Development Plan that it was overtly and in retrospect alluded to that
Tembisa had been established to function at that time as a dormitory settlement for
the neighbouring economic centres of the East Rand region such as Kempton Park
Olifantsfontein and Midrand (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
An abstract in 2000 SDF report(SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000 stated
the following that investigations had confirmed that the Sethokga hostel buildings
were structurally sound except for some weather proofing of external walls and basic
finishes to walls floors and ceiling Some repair work to cracks and precautions to pre-
empt future cracking may be necessary but the hostel blocks would offer little
difficulty in terms of conversion into single and family units According to the report
there seemed to be more problems with engineering services For example the
internal sewer reticulation was said to be so dilapidated that it may have needed to
be replaced entirely Parts of the water supply network would need to be replaced
fire hydrants installed electricity supply upgraded and grading of roads and storm-
water disposal required substantial attention (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
When the completed report was presented in 2000 it set out a case that the
municipality was currently negotiating with a non-profit organisation to acquire hostel
land and convert the hostel buildings into single and family units and manage such
housing stock (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) It further documented
that the lsquoultimatersquo number of dwelling units would be about 1200 with the first phase
of development to deliver 500 units The report suggested that the development
would be undertaken by an external organisation and that few planning guidelines
Page | 47
would need to be proposed to harmonize Sethokga hostel residential complex with
the rest of the Tembisa Township In the report it is assumed that the hostel conversion
would should result in a lsquosecurity complexrsquo type of housing development and
access to the complex would be gained mainly from local distributors such as the
extension of MbizaIzimbongi Street and Nyarhi Street (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000)
The report argued for change in the household profile of the hostel and this would
result in an increased demand for additional social facilities such as schools cregraveches
churches libraries play area(s) etc It was found in the report that space intensive (in
terms of size) social facilities eg cregraveches and a multipurpose centre should be
encouraged within the complex (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Additionally limited retail specifically corner shops should be established within the
complex Lastly the report suggested that it was important to align the services in the
area with the rest of the EMM and ensure adequate capacity at points where the
services connected into the hostel Roads in particular were highlighted as important
in this regard to ensure continuity and appropriate distribution of traffic movement
What is more the report states that traffic should be discouraged within the new
settlement (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
The SDF marked the entire Sethokga hostel complex as lsquohostel upgradingrsquo married to
public open space within the vicinity of the complex churches sports fields and
mixed use areas were proposed in the SDF (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
Page | 48
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework (SDF) 2000
The development proposals in the 2000 Oakmoor area19 SDF proposed that Sethokga hostel be
Redeveloped into family units The SDF also proposed mixed use nodal developments within and around
the Oakmoor area and proposed additional facilities such as cregraveches schools and recreational
facilities in certain areas
Source SJN Development Planning Consultants Planning Area 19 Oakmoor Development
Plan Development Proposals Final Report 2000
This SDF for the area is quite old and has not been updated
since this 2000 plan
Sethokga
hostel
Page | 49
There are 22 hostels across Ekurhuleni which are spread across six regions in the metro
(Demacon 2014) Region A has two hostels of which one is government owned
region B has three hostels of which government owns two regions C D and E hosts
one hostel respectively while region F has sixteen hostels (it is not clear how many are
owned by government) (Demacon 2014)
In terms of social facilities and amenities the study area is situated within a 3km radius
from two schools Rabasotho Combined School and Philena Middle School It is also
within a 2km radius from a healthcare facility - Esselen Park Satellite Clinic - and within
a 1km radius from a sporting facility - Esselen Park Sports School of Excellence
(Demacon 2014) The nearest police station is roughly 6km away and a lsquogenerousrsquo
number of shopping as well as entertainment centres are found within a 15 to 20km
radius of the hostel The nearest taxi route is less than 100m with the nearest train
stations including the Tembisa Limindlela and Kaalfontein stations all falling within a
10km radius (Demacon 2014)
In 2013 the Tembisa economy contributed 83 to the overall economy of the EMM
whilst Ekurhuleni contributed 253 to the overall economy of the Gauteng province
in 2013 (Demacon 2014) Sethokga hostel forms part of the Kempton Park Tembisa
precinct and according the Sethokga Hostels Mixed Typology Market Analysis Report
it falls within the development context of the Kempton Park Tembisa precinct It hosts
a range of housing typologies supported under various housing programmes
(Demacon 2014) which include but are not limited to Informal Settlement Upgrading
programmes and projects Integrated Residential Development Programmes(s) and
Gap Market Housing Units According to this report there also exists several
opportunities for the development of medium to higher density residential
developments (Demacon 2014) The EMMs 2010 Metropolitan Spatial Development
Framework suggests that among the several intentions of the metro the EMM will seek
to expand the affordable housing market and that it will seek to accommodate a
wider range of the metrorsquos populace by making a range of housing options available
for people across different income groupings (Demacon 2014)
This next section exhibits the lsquoambiencersquo of Sethokga hostel as it currently stands It
delves into some detail regarding the current setting of the hostel and takes the
reader through the authorrsquos experience being in the hostel and lsquotravellingrsquo through its
narrow corridors It shares my experience of going into this dauntingly male
dominated environment riddled with metaphorical tones of disempowerment
despondency and neglect All the images displayed here were taken by the author
Page | 50
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel
In terms of its infrastructure the hostel is said to still be somewhat structurally sound
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005) Aesthetically however it appears quite old and rundown
and leaves a lot to be desired The neglected state of refuse and rubble removal
adds to the wear and tear appearance of the hostel Each of the blocks that make-
up the hostel consists of separate dormitories and entry into each dormitory is gained
through a common access point - a door - that leads into a communal area with a
basic cooking and dining area There are no ceilings in any of the dormitories The
paint-work both inside and outside has long worn out In general the hostel appears
especially dull and unsightly
321 Built form architecture
Figure 4
The hostel is old and run-down
The adjoining hostel blocks are lined with a
number of lsquoinformalrsquo traders
This area that leads into one of the hostel
blocks is where a resident displays his goods
for selling
Page | 51
A number of the men have cars which they
park in their respective blocks
Walk-up that leads into one of the dorms
that is later photographed and shows the
condition of the interior of the hostel
The hostel is in an obvious state of neglect
and refuse removal is ignored
I spotted a number of chickens roaming about
in the hostel and a small vegetable garden
near one of the entrances into a dorm
There is one entry and exit point into most of
the blocks in the hostel
Page | 52
Figure 5
This is a communal cooking area It was said
that because the stove is so old and has a
number of issues the electricity powering the
stove is never turned off and so it runs
constantly through the day and night time
The area next to the cooking area is where
groceries and other goods are stored for
safe-keeping
This communal dining area also leads into
the rest of the dorm and the place where the
hostel dwellers sleep
None of the dorms have ceilings or any
added furnishings (ie lighting) The hostel
has never been re-painted or renovated
since it was built in the early 1980s
Page | 53
This corridor leads into the bedrooms where
the men sleep Sheets andor curtains lead to
what felt like very restricted distressing and
unpleasent living quarters
The compartments offer very limited room to
move around and offer little privacy There
are two beds per compartment with up to
three people sharing a bed The living
conditions are as what Ramphele (1993)
described as constraining to varying degrees
since it is a physically restricted environment
with blurred boundaries of personal private
space The physical proximity to others offers
practically no prospect for privacy or liberty
to accommodate visitors
Page | 54
Figure 6
322 Municipal amenities
Male urinal
Communal toilet
Communal shower
Most of the hostel blocks in the hostel have
electricity yet it seems to be offered for
free
The entrance (door) leading to the one
communal shower and toilet facility There is
one bathroom per dorm
Page | 55
Figure 7
323 The adjoining area
Most of the blocks in the hostels have
communal indoor as well as outdoor taps
with running water provided without
charge
lsquoInformalrsquo activity trade takes place in
and around the hostel
The council offices are situated adjacent to
one of the hostel blocks across the street
The municipality does not collect refuse in
the hostel so it is up to the hostel residents to
dispose of their refuse (it was not clear why
the municipality did not collect refuse in the
hostel)
Page | 56
According to the (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) entry and access to the hostel are
determined by ones ability to negotiate for a bed Much like what was described by
Ramphele (1993) the closest likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo in hostels was in the form
of a bed this persists at Sethokga To some extent every aspect of life and survival in
Sethokga revolves around a bed
One gains entry into Sethokga through a block chairperson (Sololo interview 2015)
Some of the functions and responsibilities of these block chairpersonrsquos is to know what
is happening in that particular hostel block The illustration given by the economic
representative for the ward Mr Sololo was that
ldquoWhatever which has been happening in a particular block the chairperson
should be aware of it and should call a meeting Letrsquos say if you are sitting in a
block here and you have got a jukebox and you find that you are selling
liquor and now they tell you that by 10 orsquoclock you close down and the music
should be off Then you do not comply with that the block chairperson will
report you to the hostel committee and they will sit and come up with a fine
for you if you do not listen even after they fine you they will chase you out of
the hostelrdquo
According to Sololo interview (2015) the block chairpersons maintain peace and
order and need to ensure that any conflict is mediated They are elected by the
residents of a given block and are entrusted with their grievances Ideally they should
be first point of contact before anything is to be escalated to the ward councillor ie
if a pipe bursts and they are without water This would need to be reported to the
EMM by either the block chairperson and if the problem remains unresolved it is then
escalated to the ward councillor (Sololo interview 2015)
33 Conclusion
Chapter three has explored a number of elements which model the status quo of the
study field Ironically the conditions in the hostel are not much different to many of
the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg Sethokga hostel also resembles
many other hostels across the country The hostel is overcrowded there is little room
to manoeuvre and there is an obvious lack of privacy The hostel is a possible health
hazard to those who live in it
Page | 57
This chapter shared some of my own experience of the hostel My experience consisted out
of being in the hostel taking photographs in and around the hostel and engaging with the
living environment Inside the hostel I was engulfed by its narrow poorly lit and what felt like
stifling corridors Corridors divided by curtains and sheets led into what were very confined
sleeping compartments Beds offer a place of rest for those who have voluntarily or
involuntarily sought refuge in the hostel Many after all consider the hostels as a lsquobetterrsquo
alternative to homelessness The experience for me was unlike any I have ever felt since the
circumstance of my life has provided a certain comfort that was surely challenged in the
modest time that I spent at Sethokga Chapter four examines what has been the states
approach to hostel conversion
Page | 58
The statesrsquo approach to hostel conversion
4 Introduction
The discussion in this chapter will reflect and review South African state policy post-1994
that concerns hostels Chapter four will also critically discuss and describe the
fundamentals of what have been considered two of the leading approaches to hostel
redevelopment conversion namely the Hostel Redevelopment Programmes (HRP) and
the Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach
There have been a number of state interventions post-1994 that have seemingly been a
lsquosignrsquo of governments lsquodesirersquo to improve the living conditions of not just hostel residents
but of a vast majority of South Africanrsquos who were subjected to poor living conditions
(Thurman 1997) However for the purpose of this study there will be particular focus on
interventions around hostels In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005) concur with a few
other authors that during post democracy the South African government introduced
along with other housing programmes a hostel upgrading conversion programme
aimed primarily at converting hostels into integrated family-oriented developments
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
South Africarsquos housing policy was launched in 1994 and the housing subsidy scheme
promised to deliver one million houses in five years (UrbanLankMark 2011) This would be
delivered through a range of subsidy mechanisms (UrbanLankMark 2011) According to
Dyiki interview(2015) in 1995 or about 1996 a National Hostel Redevelopment Policy was
approved and was among one of the primary national housing programmes (Dyiki
interview 2015) To facilitate nation-building and effective state formation it was believed
that social programmes such as state funded housing programmes would play a pivotal
role in this regard (Netshitenzhe 2011) Moreover the nation-building agenda saw the
government set the country bold and far-reaching goals and these somewhat became
associated with certain policies ideologies and norms (Netshitenzhe 2011) However
redundant budgetary rituals inadequate feasibility studies weak project evaluation
bureaucratic inefficiency managing community expectations and political interference
have been some of the issues that have held back progress (von Holdt 2010 and
Pienaar 2010) As a result housing provided by government has often been poorly
Page | 59
located and in some respect it has continued to perpetuate a reality of spatial
segregation (Charlton et al 2014)
This next section will describe how the hostel conversion approach has been articulated
through state policy through subsequent grants and schemes
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach
Through the provision of grants and schemes government has made efforts to provide
funding for the redevelopment conversion of hostels However there has been
somewhat of a bias on public sector hostels as the grants are provided mainly for the
redevelopment conversion of hostels owned by municipalities or provincial government
(Department of Human Settlements 2015) In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
provide a synopsis of some of governmentsrsquo earliest approaches to addressing lsquothe hostel
issuersquo (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) This is summarised as follows
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Peoples Housing Process
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme (this will be discussed in
section 42)
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Arguably the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units
Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of state efforts to grapple with the vast
challenges around hostels hostel life and the social ills that have become endemic to
hostels (Dyiki 2006) The essence of the approaches listed below was that hostels would
be redeveloped converted to create sustainable human living conditions To re-
integrated these hostel communities into the surrounding township communities (Pienaar
and Cloete 2005)
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership was premised on
the notion that Developers this could also include the municipality would be able to
submit project proposals for the development of housing on stands that were serviced for
people who qualified in terms of eligibility criteria eg a combined household income of
Page | 60
the beneficiary versus the available subsidy amount provided by the state Households
would then be required to contribute to the development (that is the construction of their
house) from their own savings or through what was referred to as lsquosweet equityrsquo
(providing their own material and labour) Locational and geographic factors would also
affect the amount of the subsidy by 2005 Pienaar and Cloete (2005) noted that this
subsidy had delivered an approximate 13 million homes which were primarily low-cost
free-standing
In the case of hostels redevelopment one option was that the subsidy could be used to
build new free-standing dwellings for individual full title ownership on unused portions of
land within hostel complexes This option would require sub-division of the land as well as
the installation of additional service Under the provisions of the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme another option would be to convert existing dormitories into family
apartments that could be sold off to beneficiaries under sectional title This sectional title
is a form of ownership where an individual holds title to a dwelling unit it can be a free-
standing unit or part of a multi-unit storey building The individual owns title together
with all the other owners of sectional dwellings on that property an undivided share of the
land on which the dwellings are built (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) However the challenge
was that where existing dormitories were converted and sold under title the projects
would be exposed to a host of problems that sectional title properties generally
encountered in low-income areas in the private sector ie poor management and
maintenance and difficulties in collecting levies and service debts (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process
The Peoplersquos Housing Process was reportedly introduced to enable communities
particularly those in disadvantaged areas to participate in the provision of their own
housing without the participation interference or involvement of private developers
However technical and administrative support and consultation would be offered by
Housing Support Organisations which were approved to serve this function (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005) What were termed as facilitation grants would be made available by the
government to lsquokick-startrsquo the housing projects The beneficiaries could apply for a grant
to pay for the services rendered by the Housing Support Organisation(s) and the housing
subsidy would be the same as for what was contained in the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) hostel residents could as a
community collective make use of this avenue as a means of obtaining ownership of an
improved residence with the assistance of their local authority a non-governmental
Page | 61
organisation (NGO) or perhaps a cluster of professions who could provide support and
administrative assistance as their Housing Support Organisation (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing was introduced in 1995 and was essentially a
variant of the project-linked subsidy provided to non-profit institutions independent of
government and registered as legally approved entities Households earning less than
R3500 per month would be provided through this subsidy with subsidised rental housing
by these entities In 1995 when the subsidy was introduced it carried a once-off capital
grant of R16 000 per dwelling but by 2002 the amount had increased to R27 000 as part of
the governmentrsquos aspiration to promote medium density housing Pienaar and Cloete
(2005) note that because the hostel redevelopment programme had been in limbo for
several years at the time of their study the Institutional Subsidy approach had been
considered as a viable alternative to accelerate hostel conversion projects The tenure
options under this subsidy it was proposed would include
Rental
Co-operative ownership
An instalment sale option in the form of a lsquorent to buyrsquo practice with a
minimum rental period of four years to qualify for the conversion to ownership
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Under the National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
the National Housing Code (for subsidised housing) delineates subsidised housing as
Permanent residential structures that have security of tenure both internal
and external privacy
Housing that has portable water serviced with adequate energy and sanitary
facilities
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing were set
to give effect to the objectives of the Housing Act 1997 which came into effect on 1 April
Page | 62
1998 To ensure quality and durable housing products that complied with particular
minimum standards (National Housing Report 2009) For instance dwellings had to have
a minimum gross floor area of 30m2 but this has since been amended (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005)
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country
Some international interest has been generated to consider intervention in hostels and
efforts to redevelopingconverting hostels The point of this section is to illustrate that
hostels occupied and in some respect have continued to occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are one of many representations of
the physical manifestation of three centuries of systematic racial discrimination and
economic exploitation (Thurman 1997) The consolidation of the migrant labour system
through hostels the poor living conditions of hostels the dishonour of hostel life and the
control they exert on the African populace Saw hostels gaining the attention of a
number of international agencies and authorities who put resources towards and took an
interest in reconfiguring the disposition of hostels (Dyiki interview 2015)
In the period between August 2002 and April 2003 the USAID (United States Agency for
International Development) extended its support to community based approaches to
housing in South Africa and in turn created a platform where it would have input(s) into
South Africarsquos national housing policy (Urban Sector Network 2003)
Hostel redevelopment was supported under a grant provision provided by the USAID this
had two main objectives The first was that policy and information dissemination should
serve as key objectives and secondly that USAID would have a voice in the facilitation of
hostel redevelopments Initially the grant was meant to run from 23 August 2000 to 30
August 2002 but an extension was requested and the grant extended for the period 1
September 2002 to 30 April 2003 (Urban Sector Network 2003) Additionally the on-goings
of the programme instituted under the grant were to include the following activities
Identifying and conducting research into tenure options and feasible
management models for hostels
Identifying possible needs and challenges and to then conduct nation-wide
research in the hostel sector
Facilitating workshops and consolidating policy submissions and to submit
research papers to the Department of Housing
Page | 63
To publish research papers
To conduct mid-term and final evaluation of the programme
Conducting information outreaches where the USN (Urban Sector Network) would
play an essential role in informing government the private sector as well as
communities about the opportunities which could be created through the
redevelopment of hostels (Urban Sector Network2003)
The Urban Sector Network (USN) then proceeded to make specific recommendations on
the hostel redevelopment approach The USN called for the broadening on the scope of
the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme to include all hostels (private and
grey sector) and not just public sector hostel Recommendations were made that the
norms and standards for the redeveloped hostels should be developed along with
national guidelines for the management of redeveloped hostels by local authorities They
advocated for stronger support for co-operative housing The redevelopment of hostels
to be approached in an integrated and holistic manner and hostels should not be
redeveloped in an isolated manner The subsidy amount for hostels redevelopment and
social facilitation needed to be increased Lastly that hostels redevelopment should
support livelihood strategies and capacity building and training of hostel residents during
the redevelopment process was essential (Urban Sector Network 2003)
The USN proposed a departure from the public sector hostel redevelopment bias of the
Hostel Redevelopment plan (Urban Sector Network 2003)
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme (HRP)
In principal the Hostel Redevelopment Programme supported an unambiguous bias in
favour of public sector hostels (Dyiki 2006) Public sector hostels are those hostels
owned by either provincial or local authorities that offered accommodation to workers
from a range of industries (Thurman 1997) Grey sector hostels (in which the structures
wereare owned by private companies but the land by a provincial or local authority
and private sector hostels) did not form part of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme
(Dyiki 2006) The biggest limitation and challenge of the HRP was in its narrow focus on
solely the conversion of hostels beds (Thurman 1997) The aim of the HRP was to provide
a subsidy allocation that was based per bed but it was criticised as being impractical
and unfeasible and not adequately addressing the issue of housing provision (Dyiki
2006) Dyiki interview (2015) believes that the challenge of the HRP was that it was not
talking to individuals but rather it was a subsidy given to the state to improve the hostel
and the standard of living in the hostel Since most of the public sector hostels were
Page | 64
managed by the municipalities the municipalities received the subsidy and the
residents of the hostels therefore had very little say in how the subsidy could in effect be
used The other challenge was that grey sector and public sector hostels were not part
of the subsidy (Dyiki interview 2015)
The Hostel Redevelopment Programme was perhaps the earliest strategy conceived by
the South African government as a national policy aiming to
Promote habitable and humane conditions in hostel conversions
Ensure the involvement of hostel residents the surroundingneighbouring
community and relevant (publicprivate) authorities and any other entity
affected by the project are involved in the decision-making processes
Facilitate and promote social integration within hostel communities and the
hostels and adjacent communities
Put measures in place to accommodate any persons displaced by the hostel
conversion project
Empower promote economic development and seeks to be development-
oriented
According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment
Programme was largely based on the premise that this programme would make some
provisions for grant funding from the central government towards the conversion or
upgrading of hostels particularly public sector or grey-sector hostels This will be done with
the broad aim of the programme to facilitate and create living conditions for residents
that are humane and hygienic by providing prospects for housing options that are
affordable and sustainable With tenure options for
Rental
Possible ownership for those at the lower income scale
Upon its conception a capital subsidy of R16 000 was initially proposed per family or R4
000 per individual Additionally to be eligible for this programme hostel redevelopment
programmes would need to be
Planned and implemented in a participative and comprehensive manner
with the requirement that interest groups would need to be established
Based on socio-economic studies undertaken to determine and consider the
needs and affordability aspect of those who would be affected (ie stand to
benefit from the project)
Page | 65
Unfailing in ensuring that there is no displacement of residents unless
alternative accommodation is provided
Sustainable with regards to the on-going payments of maintenance and any
other related costs
Purposeful to augment employment opportunities for the hostel residents as
well as the locals in the construction and on-going maintenance of the
project
The broad aim of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme (Mdunyelwa 2015) was to
convert these historically male-occupied spaces which were also subsequently meant
for migrant labourers to family units But it will be done in such a way to able and
capacitate the accommodation of the families of these men In some way but perhaps
not explicitly stated in the Hostel Redevelopment Programme policy brief there is an
element of urbanisation that is implied Therefore it was an attempt to somewhat
encourage the men to relocate their families from their rural home-base (Mdunyelwa
2015)
The shortcomings of the HRP in how it had a restricted focus on hostel beds and
somewhat of an oversight on the complexity of the configuration of hostels saw it being
replaced by the Community Residential Units Programme (CRU) (Pienaar 2010) Dyiki
interview (2015) in my interview with him argued that the CRU Programme unlike the HRP
contains a lot more detail that was perhaps missed in the HRP He further suggested that
the CRU Programme could be considered somewhat of a lsquocost recoveryrsquo strategy by
government to recoup some of the monies spent on these projects As the CRU
programme has a strong rental housing stock component to it (Dyiki interview 2015)
44 The Community Residential Units Programme (CRU Programme)
The Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme has since replaced the National
Hostel Redevelopment Programme At the time of this study there are approximately
2000 public hostels across the country with a vast majority of them still needing to be
afforded some attention and measures to redevelop them (Demacon 2014) According
to the Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the CRU Programme (2006)
the CRU Programme aims to facilitate the provision of secure and stable rental tenure for
lower income persons Furthermore stating that the programme seeks to provide a
framework for addressing the many and varied forms of existing public sector residential
accommodation as the previous approach under the HRP only considered a ldquoper-bedrdquo
Page | 66
approach that proved unfavourable on a number of occasions (CRU Programme Policy
Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme is believed to provide a lsquobetterrsquo suited programme and a coherent
framework to assist in dealing with a vast range of public stock which has for the most
part been indecisively and incomprehensively dealt with (Demacon 2014) The CRU
Programme targets low income individuals as well as households with an average R 3500
monthly income and who have not been able to find suitable accommodation
According to the CRU Programme in the years leading up to 2006 there was an
approximate 4512 of households nationally which fall within the R0-R800 income groups
currently renting and an approximate 4027 falling within the R801 ndash R3200 income
groups (CRU Programme Policy Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme intends to cover the following areas
a) Public hostels that are owned by Provincial Housing Departments and municipalities
b) ldquoGreyrdquo hostels which are hostel that have both a public and private ownership
component due to historical reasons
c) Public housing stock that forms part of the ldquoEnhanced Extended Discount Benefit
Schemerdquo but which cannot be transferred to individual ownership and has to be
managed as rental accommodation by the public owner
d) Post-1994 newly developed public residential accommodation owned by provincial
housing departments and municipalities
e) Existing dysfunctional abandoned andor distressed buildings in inner city or township
areas that have been taken over by a municipality and funded by housing funds
(Department of Human Settlements 2015)
The CRU programme policy document is quite a laborious document In general the CRU
programme seeks to promote and advance the provision of rental options for lower
income groups facilitate communication and participation of residents throughout the
process provide a variety of rental stock and provide secure and stable rental stock This
will be done by what the CRU Programme articulates as providing a realistic funding
programme (Department of Human Settlements 2015)
According to the CRU programme rental stock provided by the programme is to be
owned by either a provincial housing department or a municipality However this has
been a seriously contested position on the part of the individuals and households
affected by the programme who want home ownership (Dyiki interview 2015)
Page | 67
45 Conclusion
There have been a number of projects over the past several years which have in part
articulated the states aspiration to reconfigure the lsquoway of lifersquo in hostels The Hostel
Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units Programme are
considered to have been the leading approaches to reconfiguring hostels within the
countryrsquos broader landscape Whether hostels have or do not have a place in
democratic South Africa is part of what this study is looking to explore
Chapter five introduces the Sethokga hostel conversion project and in principal seeks to
unpack the conceptualisation of the project while reflecting on the findings of the
interviews
Page | 68
The Sethokga hostel conversion project
5 Introduction
Chapter five will examine the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seek to unpack
how the project has been conceptualised Discussing the main components of the
project its main stakeholders the project phases exploring what are its defining
characteristics the broad vision and aim of the project how the project has understood
the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn set to address them and then also
in what way(s) the residents of the hostel have been involved in the project Furthermore
this chapter will examine what the project considers important in terms of gender issues
what have been some limitations of the project while it also considers what the
anticipated impact and benefit of the project is
Lastly and in view of the interviews that were conducted chapter five discusses how the
residents of the hostel and the community of Tembisa and greater Ekurhuleni will know
that the project has been completed and has been successful By and large this chapter
offers testament of the findings from the field work and reviews the rationale of the
Sethokga conversion project To conclude this chapter a collage of diagrams and
images will be presented to provide the reader with greater insight(s) into the Sethokga
hostel conversion project
51 Outline of the main components of the project
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project
There have been a number of stakeholders involved in the Sethokga hostel conversion
project the main stakeholders include
o The Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement (GPDHS)
o LTE Consulting
o The Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
o The ward councillor and various community committees and leaders
o The Sethokga Hostel residents
o The community of Tembisa
Page | 69
The roles of the stakeholders are summarised as follows National government is the key
funder of the Sethokga hostel conversion project the funds are transferred to the GPDHS
who have to then ensure that the costs of the project are managed LTE Consulting is a
consulting company appointed by the GPDHS for the oversight and construction of the
Sethokga hostel conversion project They work in collaboration with the EMM (the local
authority) and its various departments such as the services department the energy
department quality assurance etc However the GPDHS remains the lsquomain decision-
makerrsquo and lsquocustodianrsquo of the project with the lead oversight on the budget and
programmeproject management The project manager Mr Sisa Majikijela is the official
from the GPDHS that is directly responsible for supervision and coordination of the
project The ward councillor and the various community committees leaders facilitate
avenues of communication and engagement between the officials (from province the
EMM and LTE) with the residents of Sethokga and community lsquoAs the eyes and ears on
the groundrsquo (Majikijela interview 2015) ideally the ward councillor and various
community committees leaders have an important role to play in ensuring that the
Sethokga residents and community will be the rightful recipients of the project The
Sethokga hostel residents and broader community have a vested interest in the project
because it stands to affect andor benefit them (Sololo interview2015)
Once the project is completed with the family units fully constructed (ie with furnishings
such as trees plants parking bays and so forth) and the services installed The project will
be handed over to the EMM for on-going administration maintenance and the
collection of rentals (Shibambo interview 2015) The Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlement in collaboration with the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and LTE
Consulting play a key role as facilitates of the conversion of Sethokga hostel into family
units (Majikijela interview 2015)
522 Project phases
The data regarding the project phases was easily accessible and generously provided by
the consulting resident engineer and the architect providing me with a market analysis
study and a few other key documents The development concept of the hostel
conversion project divides the project into three phases and further subdivides each of
the phases into two phases phases A and B (Demacon 2014)
Initial studies (ie pre-feasibility studies) were done in 2008 but the demolition of the first
four blocks of the hostel demolished for the current phase 1A only took place in August of
2011 and it was anticipated that phase 1A would be completed and handed over to the
Page | 70
municipality by the end of 2014 but this did not happen (Majikijela interview 2015) At the
time of conducting fieldwork between the months of August and September 2015 it was
said that phase 1A was near completion with just the landscaping parking and water
provision left to completed (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
Phase 1A of the project was meant to bring to completion a total of 240 units
accommodating 1 194 people to provide 69 parking bays (one per four units) a total of
54 one bedroom units 117 two bedroom units and 69 three bedroom units at an average
unit size of 324m2 477m2 and 588m2 for the one two and three bedrooms respectively
(Demacon 2014) However only a total of 222 units have been built and this shortfall was
largely attributed to the underlying dolomite geological conditions of the site (Bako and
Shibambo interview 2015)
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
The Sethokga hostel conversion project has been administered under the CRU
programme and forms part of a national agenda to convert hostels into family units
(Dyiki interview 2015) The target group under the CRU programme is individuals and
households earning between R800 and R3 500 per month who are able to enter what the
CRU programme has termed the lsquoformal private rental and social housing marketrsquo
(Demacon 2014)
The new residential units (the family units) are situated on ervan 128 and 5729 of the
Sethokga complex within the administrative jurisdiction of the Kempton Park Customer
Care Area (CCA) which is the administrative body conducting oversight of development
and town planning affairs for the Tembisa and Kempton Park areas (Demacon 2014)
The family units are three storey walk-ups and appear somewhat spacious and far more
appealing than the hostel structures The CRU proposes that bachelorsone bedroom
units of 20m2 to 35m2 should be allocated at a monthly rental of R270 ndash R450 a two
bedroom unit of 35m2-45m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R450 to R850 and
that a three bedroom unit of 45m2-80m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R850 ndash
R1650 Rentals have been and remain a contestation in a number of hostel conversion
projects across the country and Sethokga is no different According to the economic
representative for the ward Sololo interview (2015) the residents of Sethokga hostel are
contesting that they want to pay R150 for a one bedroom unit R200 for a two bedroom
unit and R300 for a three bedroom unit
According to the principles of the CRU programme the ownership of the rental housing
stock is to be reserved by either the Gauteng Provincial Department of Human
Page | 71
Settlement (GPDHS) or the EMM The ownership of the family units can be transferred by
the GPDHS to the EMM in line with the Housing Act no right(s) of ownership can be
transferred to tenants (Pienaar 2010)
The process of the Sethokga hostel conversion has on an administrative and government
support level been facilitated through a grant allocation from national government to
province (GPDHS) This grant has made provisions for pre-feasibility studies
socialcommunity facilitation the relocationreallocation of some residents (within the
hostel or to alternative sites to make way for demolition and construction of phase 1A)
and the consideration and compensation of construction costs and professional fees
(Majikijela interview 2015) The allocation of the units determining rental structures
applying indigent relief measures where necessary rental collection and maintenance
as well as the management of the family units are factors determined by the GPDHS and
the EMM cooperatively (Sololo interview 2015) The hostel residents are then at some
level consulted and lsquoencouragedrsquo to participate in this regard (Dyiki interview 2015)
Seemingly throughout project implementation the stakeholders have been kept informed
of the status and progress of the project With respect to notifying the hostel residents and
general public notices are placed in and around the hostel to inform them of meetings
and the ward councillorrsquos office take the lead on this (Mthethwa interview 2015)
There have been a number of communitypublic meetings that have taken place as the
project has progressed From the fieldwork I was not able to draw on precisely how many
meetings had taken place since or precisely when the meetings took place or what was
discussed in each of those meetings Generally the ward councillor said at least once a
month a consultative and progress report meeting would take place between the
various stakeholders where officials would engage the hostel residents and general
public
According to Majikijela interview (2015) the ward councillor and the economic rep the
main area of involvement on the part of the hostel residents has been in providing
labour A small percentage of the residents have been involved in the construction-work
and some of the clerical work on the project Their involvement in discussions on the
project is said to often be arbitrarily halted by political interference (Sololo interview
2015) For instance Bako interview (2015) the architect recalled that on the design of the
family units Liefa Architects did not talk to the end user ie the residents to ask them
what they wanted Instead a design which was informed by other examples of similar
projects was presented to the residents of Sethokga and the general public (Bako
interview 2015) ldquoThe design of the hostel was not lsquoexclusiversquo to Sethokga and its contextrdquo
(Bako interview 2015)
Page | 72
In relation to the size of the hostel and its residents only a very small percentage of the
hostel residents have been employed in the project the December 2013 January 2014
labour records reported the following
Table 1
Total workforce 66
Females 7
Males 59
Youth 28
Adults 38
Semi-skilled 20
Skilled 22
Disabled 0
General workers 24
Source LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor report
I was fortunate to have attended one of the community meetings that were held at an
old community hall within the vicinity of the hostel This meeting took place on a
Saturday the 15th of August 2015 and it was quite the experience There was a relatively
strong police presence at the meeting The police kept watch and managed the
activities inside and outside the community hall As there were concerns that the
proceedings might get out of hand and a possible tussle between those in attendance
might arise The meeting was chaired by the ward councillor and aside from the residents
of Sethokga in attendance was one official from the GPDHS an official from the EMM
community leaders and ANC committee members
There was an obvious and overwhelming male presence in the meeting tempers ran
high and there was an observable resistance from the residents of Sethokga to the
presence of the three females in the meeting This included me and two female
committee members Several times the meeting was disrupted by shouts and echoes of
discontentment questioning what women were doing at a meeting for men lsquordquothey have
no place here they do not even live hererdquo were the words of some of the men Our
presence seemed to really infuriate some of the men This was similar to what Ramphele
(1993) Segal (1991) Thurman (1997) and Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) observed in
their work and suggested that even now and within the context of Sethokga that the
men in the hostel are still quite at odds with having women as a part of their lsquogathering of
Page | 73
menrsquo and possibly even living among them The demeanour of some of the men in this
meeting suggested that they found the presence and role of women in these meetings
unneeded It was evident that these men had become far too accustomed to living
lsquoalonersquo as men Ramphele (1993) noted that the idea of an unambiguous constant and
unrestricted presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a serious point
of contention for some of men Some men expressed unwillingness while others a
struggle to comprehend or endorse this change that seemed overly unfamiliar and
challenging to come to grips with (Ramphele 1993) From my observation in this meeting
the same seems to hold true for Sethokga
The purpose of the meeting was to consult the hostel residents who were identified to be
the first recipients beneficiaries of the allocating of family units to consult them on issues
of final rental proposals allocation processes and status of the project The invitation for
this meeting was apparently only extended to those particular individuals but
subsequently the meeting was taken over by those who had objections to the process of
allocation rentals and why the meeting sought to exclude them and divide the residents
Generally the meeting was unruly and the ward councillor as well as the community
leaders and committee members struggled to manage the crowd and the rampant
tempers in the room
The agenda for the meeting is provided below to provide the reader with some context
and outline of the intension of the meeting Unfortunately tempers ran especially high in
this meeting and in my opinion none of the items on the agenda were successfully
addressed
Page | 74
Figure 8 August 15 community meeting agenda
Source Sethokga Community meeting 2015
521 Broad vision and aim of the project
The vision and aim of the project was described by the key informants who to some
extent unanimously used the following key words integration sustainability community
participation to improve peoplersquos lives restoring honour addressing the ills of hostel life
and bringing families into a safe and secure environment The housing officer for me
captured well the overall sentiments of the key informants when he said ldquowe are
surrounded and have so many companies in Tembisa so clearly you will find letrsquos say a
white guy working in the area but then they travel to Kempton Park or some other area
outside Tembisa and that is where they live So it would be nice to see him living in
Sethokga The project is about integration and not just integrating the residents of
Page | 75
Sethokga to the rest of the township but other ways of integration like racial integration
That is what I want to seerdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015)
Additionally the broad vision and aim of the hostel conversion project is to instil a culture
of payment into not just the hostel but the broader community ldquoPeople cannot just keep
wanting everything for free government cannot afford itrdquo The interviewees that
expressed this position were Majikijela Sololo Mthethwa Dyiki Bako and Shibambo
Seemingly under the CRU programme the project would seek to influence and instil this
culture of payment through the rental housing stock focus of the programme That
largely seeks to promote government owned and managed rental housing stock a
departure from the lsquofreersquo housing approach (Bako interview 2015)
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga development
Source Liefa Architects 2015
Phase 1B Phase 2B Phase 3B
Phase 1A Phase 2A
Phase 3A
Page | 76
What was surprising to me was that the family units are not intended to be occupied by
current residents only The idea is that some of the current residents would live elsewhere
and when this question was posed to the official from the GPDHS Majikijelarsquos interview
(2015) response was that the hostel residents who did not qualify in terms of the required
criteria for the renting of the units would be allocated RDPs in the neighbouring area of
Esselen Park but he could not provide clarity as to how and when this would happen
The vision of Sethokga that can be seen from the plan provided below is a reconfigured
locality Rehabilitated single-sex compounds into self contained family units furnished
with child care facilities park(s) garden(s) a community centre recreation facilities and
parking areas
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn
set out to address those needs and challenges
Although the CRU Programme only sets particular administrative operational and
project facilitation guidelines Arguably these guidelines do in some respect address
a number of the ills associated with hostels such as the issue of overcrowding lack of
privacy and poor living conditions (Pienaar 2010) Within Sethokga there are
challenges of tribalism high prevalence of HIV drug abuse alcohol abuse
criminality overcrowding lack of privacy possible health hazards a lack of ablution
facilities The hostel being unsafe for women (especially those who are staying in the
hostel illegally) was identified and shared by the key informants as some of the major
challenges confronting the hostel This view was shared by the ward councillor the
housing officer from the EMM the project manager from the GPDHS the consulting
engineer and the wardrsquos economic representative
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi the issue of tribalism occurred
as a result of what he recalls as a defining political shift ldquoafter the release of Mandela
and when they started preaching lsquothis thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions
happened according to who was Zulu or Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Here the ward councillor explains what he saw as
some of the factors that led to what is currently the strong predominance of Pedi and
Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel suggesting that
ldquoThey were mixed here when they started talking about negotiations that
there must be elections and then the IFP (Inkatha Freedom Party) was
rejecting that and that had nothing to do with membership it was a situation
of the warlords the Zulursquos terrorizing the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa
Page | 77
and standing with the white man The Zulursquos did not like that so that is where
the Zulu and Xhosa divide started and that is when you found that in
Sethokga it became predominantly more Xhosa there was fighting and war
the Zulursquos were chasing people out of their territory at the other hostels The
Xhosarsquos ran to Sethokga There was fighting everywhere even here in
Sethokga and all over the Pedis Vendas Tsongarsquos they all ran away from
those hostels where they were being chased out and they came hererdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
It was unclear as to the extent to which the project dealt with any of these
challenges and how or if they were factored into the project The project seems to
have a general lsquobest practicersquo approach to hostel conversion irrespective of the
circumstance of a particular hostel
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project
ldquoThe political volatility of the project poses an enormous threat to the successful
allocationletting of the family unitsrdquo (Majikijela interview 2015) On the part of the
key informants their continued inability to answer the perhaps not so simple question
of what would happen to those who could not afford the monthly rental of the family
units This suggested that the issue of rentals has remained a grey area even as the
project heads towards project completion ldquoWe will worry about that when we get
thererdquo was the brisk response to my inquiry on this matter Similar to what was
observed by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in the City Deep Redevelopment
project Sethokga faces a similar challenge
Certainly public community participation in any context is a complex and at times a
contentious exercise (Mdunyelwa 2015) I remain hesitant whether the Sethokga
hostel conversion project has been able to lsquotrulyrsquo engage residents and the broader
community in a transparent and reciprocal manner Seemingly affordability will be
the determining factor of who will be able to rent a unit To those who cannot afford
it stands to be seen what remedy will be extended to them
Moreover the following factors were cited as some of the limitations of the project
the lack of transparency political interference an inadequate dissemination of
information to residentscommunity and the projects failure to respond to what the
solution(s) will be for lsquonon-qualifyingrsquo residents who cannot afford the monthly rentals
Page | 78
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful
I wanted to find out from the key informants particularly those who have been
directly involved in the conversion project what for them would constitute a
successful project and how from their point of view the residents and the greater
community would know that the project is completed and has been
successfulunsuccessful Overall the leading response was that a project would be
successful when the family units are occupied Some of the interviewees added that
the process of allocating the units and resolving the myriad of issues are most
certainly likely to cause further delays and will require intricate resolution (ie peoplersquos
unwillingness and otherrsquos inability to pay tension and opposition to paying rentals
opening the letting to tenants who are not hostel residents and so forth)
In summary the thoughts shared by the housing office at the EMM and the wardrsquos
economic representative capture in essence the general position held by every one
of the key informants
ldquoFor me a complete project will be the units functioning on their own and then
people will be told during a public meeting We also need to involve the mayor the
MECs and the media People will be told that it is finished and this is what is going to
happenrdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015) ldquoAfter it has been completed I want to see 80
percent of the people who have been staying in the hostel still residing in the hostel
It must not just be open to whomever There are people as far as Johannesburg who
want to stay here because they see it being comfortable and nice forgetting we are
looking to improve the lives of the current hostel dwellers There are even those in the
township who think that people of the hostel cannot pay so this is not for themrdquo
(Sololo interview 2015)
Page | 79
53 Visual narrative of the family units
531 Architectural designsplans
The design of the family units is what the architect referred to as a multi-storey approach
ldquoThe three storey walk-ups address the need for housing much better than an RDP wouldrdquo
(Bako interview 2015) They have an urban apartment-like feel about them but the
mundane (uniform) paintwork gives them a distinct government provided social housing feel
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development plan
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 80
Figure 12 Architects Section E - E
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 11 Architects Section F ndash F
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 13 South Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 81
Figure 14 North Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 15 East Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 16 West Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 82
532 The project site of family units
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site
View of the site of the family units from one of
the hostel blocks situated adjacent to the
construction site across the street
Construction of the family units
commenced in August of 2011
Site notice placed at the entrance of the
family units construction site
The Sethokga community hall situated at
the entrance to the family units
construction site and adjacent to the
council offices
Page | 83
For the most partthe construction of the
family units is nearing completetion
Walking through the site personally I felt that
the family units had a somewhat prominent
RDP lsquolookrsquo about them
Ground floor view
The entrance into the construction site of the
family units and the site office which is
situtated within the vicinity of the site
Page | 84
533 Inside the Family units
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units
Doorway into one of the three bedroom
family units which leads into an open plan
dining and kitchen area
Each unit has its own dining sitting and
kitchen area
The construction site is lsquopolicedrsquo by the Red
Ants (a private security company)around the
clock and also a private security company
Some of the security members seen on site
they insisted I take a picture of them to
include in this study
Page | 85
Built-in sink and geyser
The family
units offer a number of distinct qualities that
the hostel clearly does not have which
include privacy and a dignified living
environmentspace
Each unit has its bathroom with a built-in
toilet bath and shower
Shower
Separate and additional toilet as part of the
three bedroom family units
The diningsitting area and two adjacent
bedrooms
Page | 86
The site of the family units is being guarded by a private security company and members
of the Red Ants (a private security company) When asked about this the official (the
project manager overseeing the Sethokga hostel conversion project) from the GPDHS
said that this was necessary to ensure that no unauthorised occupations take place This
was also to guard against any possible vandalism or the looting of materialsequipment
or the site office (Majikijela interview 2015)
54 Summary of main themes and findings
This study had a number of themes which resonate with the case study The localised
context of Sethokga hostel offered great insights into the current state of hostels as
spaces and places that still largely exist within a context of volatility poor living conditions
and complex socio-economic challenges (Thurman 1997) The historic exploits on hostels
revealed and I suppose confirmed that the hostel system was established supported and
perpetuated by methodical policy and controls to discourage the permanent settlement
of Africans in urban areas or any intention of relocating their family to urban areas (Segal
1991) Furthermore within the contemporary South African context this has posed a
number of challenges and has been a longstanding reality of a number of hostel dwellers
as observed in the work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010)
The view from one of the family units (a ground
floor three bedroom unit) is onto the ward
councillorrsquos offices and the hostel in the
distance
One of the three bedrooms in the family
units
Page | 87
Sethokga hostel is also one of many hostels that exist within a historically-laden context
The strong prominence of Pedi and Xhosa native speaking men in some respect also
speaks to the events of circular migration that are still a lived-reality of the men of
Sethokga This according to the ward councillor has meant that the men have had to
maintain ties with their families in the Eastern Cape and Limpopo while most of them live
in Sethokga away from their families (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) In terms of gender
issues the aspect of men and housing the hostel conversion project does not adopt a
particular stand on this Seemingly the project makes no effort to appreciate the
apparent rural location of the wives partners children and families of a vast majority of
the men in Sethokga The idea is that anyone who is able to afford the monthly rental of
the family units can sign a lease agreement and rent a unit However this presents a
number of issues and leaves a lot unaccounted for and unanswered ie will the families
of the men in the hostels make a transition to join them in the family units Is this even a
possibility for them what impact would this have on the already stretched social
amenities in the area Arguably in the case of Sethokga this oversight has been a serious
area of contention and has amplified the political volatility of the project
The heavy-handedness of the hostel system cunningly imposed a sense of no escape
yet quite interestingly the later unwillingness to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have their
hostel converted into family units (Thurman 1997)
Among the key findings of the research report is that the lsquorental onlyrsquo tenure option and
approach to the hostel conversion project was the biggest challenge and one of the
most critical points of contention (Pienaar 2010) On the one hand the hostel residents
are arguing that they cannot afford the proposed rentals while on the other hand
officials are of the opinion that this is in fact untrue and not wholly representative of the
attitude(s) of all the hostel residents Thus a supposed unwillingness to pay and a culture
of entitlement was cited by the key informants as the underlying state of affairs and one
that posed the biggest threat to the project and in particular how the family units would
be allocated
Although the project is for the most part about converting Sethokga hostel into family
units in principal it is also about redress integration improving the living conditions of
Sethokga residents reconfiguring the mental and physical landscape of hostels in
contemporary South Africa and introducing children and women into the hostel
Integration was repeatedly cited by the key informants as the main imperative of the
study Political interference and the very particular sensitivities around political allegiance
Page | 88
(keeping in the mind the local elections are fast approaching) are factors that were
cited would cause the greatest difficulty in the allocation of the family units
54 Conclusion
Undoubtedly the Sethokga hostel conversion project has a number of components and
features to it that are complex in part ambiguous and would require further and more
detailed study Seemingly the CRU programme is a lsquodeparturersquo from the Hostel
Redevelopment Programme In part it offers prospects to facilitate the provision of
affordable rental tenure for those earning below R3500 while seeking to promote the
integration of publicsocial housing into the broader housing market Under the
administration of the CRU programme one of the leading aims is to facilitate the creation
of sustainable public housing assets (Pienaar 2010) However the CRU programme has
been criticised as a framework that is largely operating in a policy environment that is
hostile elaborate and not speaking to the needs of the people on the ground
Furthermore many see it as solely a hostel upgrading policy viewed often to be done
impromptu in response to local pressures (Pienaar 2010) To paraphrase Pienaar (2010)
the vagueness regarding the roles and responsibilities of the respective provincial
department of human settlement and municipalities has not provided much confidence
in hostel conversion projects
Chapter five has examined the Sethokga hostel conversion project and attempted to
unpack how the project has been conceptualised This chapter has identified and
outlined the main components of the project its main stakeholders and what has been
their role in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Discussed were the project phases a
number of critical elements such as how the project has understood the needs and
challenges of the hostel residents In addition to this chapter five outlined the way(s) in
which the residents have been involved in the project if the project considered anything
important in terms of gender issues and if what have these been factored into the
project By and large chapter five drew extensively on the findings of the fieldwork and
made an effort to narrate some of the insights and perspectives shared by the key
informants To conclude the chapter a collage of diagrams and images were presented
to offer the reader a visual narrative of the site of the family units
Page | 89
Concluding chapter
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoWhat does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
61 Review and reflections
This research report consisted of six chapters chapter one introduced the study
chapter two provided the theoretical backdrop of the study chapter three
introduced the study area (Sethokga hostel) chapter four discussed the evolution of
hostel redevelopment conversion and what has been the states approach to hostel
conversion and chapter five examined the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project
In chapter one the main point of discussion was the research question outlining the
aim and objectives of the study and the research methodology
Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project been conceptualised
in how the project has been conceptualised does it address the stigma of hostel life
and it what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What informed the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail what is the broad aim and vision
of the project what is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
Page | 90
In chapter one it was also argued that this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects had somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore that there needed to be more inquiry and
study conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel
conversion projects
The studyrsquos theoretical backdrop was discussed in chapter two The aim of this was to
contextualise the term hostels as to clearly illustrate what is meant by it In addition
to drawing on particular strands of literature concepts ideas and arguments that
resonated with the study Chapter two argued that the historically the landscape of
hostels has by and large been complex at times perplexing and highly contentious
Chapter three introduced Sethokga hostel It elaborated on the locality of the hostel
and its local as well as municipal context A visual narrative of the hostel was also
provided and this captured the current state of the hostel and the conditions in which
its residents endure It was established that ironically the conditions in the hostel are
not much different to many of the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg
The hostel was badly designed poorly built and is suffering years of neglect it is in
appalling and overcrowded condition
Chapter four described the evolution of hostel redevelopment conversion in the
country and what has been the states approach to hostel conversion post-1994 This
chapter discussed in some detail the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme Arguing that these programmes have to
date been the lsquoforerunnersrsquo of the statersquos approach to addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo
While in chapter five the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
was examined Chapter five was the crux of this research report The discussions in the
chapters before it set up the groundwork for a critical exploration of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project and for unpacking the research question
Chapter six concludes this study and seeks to answer the question ldquoso what does this
mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo Since this
report was conducted as part of the requirements for the partial fulfilment of an
Urban and Regional Planning honours qualification It is important to address the ldquoso
what for plannersrsquo question and the value that this report stands to offer to the
Page | 91
planning profession Firstly let us reflect on what have been some of the limitations of
the study
62 Limitations of the study
For the most part this study had a wealth of information and sources to draw from
The insights and wisdom provided by the key informants were invaluable their
willingness and enthusiasm to participate in this study was not something I had
anticipated but I remain truly grateful
Due to certain constraints more especially time constraints and the particular scope
focus of the research report this posed some limitations to the study In only
interviewing and engaging with officials and not with the residents of Sethokga the
voices opinions and views of the officials told only one side of a many-sided story
How the project affects and has affected the residents Is this something they want
support and for those who do not what are some of their reasons for contention Is
circular migration still as prominent a feature within the current context of Sethokga
What is the present-day nature of household configurations in the hostels (is the duty
of the older men still to order the actions of the younger men ie the cleaning and up
keeping of the communal area and other household duties) what for the residents
of Sethokga would constitute a successful project
Even as this study concludes the side of the hostel residents remains largely untold
and unreported Furthermore the supposed apathy on the part of the hostel residents
and the views expressed by the key informants that family units offer the most ideal
and best alternative to the residents of Sethokga could not be explored and
interrogated further given the limitations of the scope of the study
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners
Within contemporary South Africa there have certainly been a vast number of
conflicting views held regarding what should be the role and future of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Although academics policy makers bureaucrats developers and
the general public have usually been unable to reach longstanding middle-ground
on what should be done about hostels One of the more widely held views is that
hostels certainly present a real challenge but also an opportunity For government
Page | 92
developers non-government organisations (NGOs) built environment practitioners
and needless to say the residents of hostels themselves (Thurman 1997)
Planners are frequently cast in the role of performing a balancing act (Campbell
2006) As a result the adaptability of the planning profession as a coherent and
impartial discipline has over the years become rather topical subjects (Campbell
2006) This has inevitably continued to require new and innovative ways of lsquoseeingrsquo
lsquocomprehendingrsquo and lsquodoingrsquo things in order to shape and re-shape an inherently
divergent and historic-laden urban landscape (Jupp and Inch 2012) In the midst of
the shifts in the traditional conception and role of the planning profession as a merely
procedural and administrative activity (Harrison and Kahn 2002) planning is still to a
great extent closely tied to government structures (Cornwall 2002) Therefore within
this particular context of government driven intervention urban planning
professionals stand to be instrumental facilitators of development and offer essential
expertise and tools towards addressing some of the challenges within our urban
landscape (Albert and Kramsch 1999)
This study observed a range of intertwined urban dynamics ie around housing socio-
economic distress a wavering political climate and the need to be more
environmentally conscientious This necessitates focused attention and much
consideration as the political economic social and environmental junctures in which
planning has come to operate has meant that the profession has become
susceptible to external pressures scrutiny and influence (Campbell and Marshall
2002)
64 Conclusion
South Africa has for a number of years into democracy been at a critical time of
limited housing supply and a desperate need for housing (Khan and Thurman 2001)
(Pienaar
2010) Planners have an important role to play in facilitating coordinating and
effecting the reconfiguration of the urban landscape towards improving the setting
of inherently socio-economically ailing spaces such as hostels (Jupp and Inch 2012)
Hostels have largely remained as spaces that have continued to perpetuate
underdevelopment inequality and disempowerment (Khan and Thurman 2001) If
family units are to wholly address the stigma of hostel life and the convoluted nature
Page | 93
of hostels to alter the landscape of hostels and define a novel future for hostels and
their residents It is certain that this will require decisive action collaborative efforts
and the wisdom of retrospection
Page | 94
List of references
African National Congress 1994 The Reconstruction and Development Programme A
policy framework ANC Johannesburg
African National Congress (2003) Briefing note 5 Housing
httpwwwancorgzaelections2004briefingshousingpdf
Albert A and Kramsch O (1999) Space Inequality and Difference lsquoRadical Turns
and lsquoCultural Termsrdquo European Planning Studies 7(1) 77 ndash 79
Bandyopadhyay S and Green E (2008) Nation-building and Conflict in Modern
Africa The Suntory Centre
Barnett C (1999) Broadcasting the Rainbow Nation Media Democracy and Nation-
building in South Africa Editorial Board of Antipode 31 (3) 274-303
Benit-Gbaffou C and Mathoho M (2010) A case study of participation in the City
Deep Hostel Redevelopment Project Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Bonner P and Nieftagodien N (2012) Ekurhuleni the making of an urban region
Wits University Press
Campbell H and Marshall R (2002) Values and professional identities in planning
practice in Allmendinger R And Tewdwr-Jones M (eds) Planning futures new
directions for planning theory London Routledge
Castles S and M J (Millerl (2008) The Age of Migration International Population
Movements in the Modern World New York The Guilford Press
Charlton S et al (2014) From Housing to Human Settlement Evolving Perspectives
South African Cities Network
Chipkin I and Meny-Gibert S (2011) Why the Past matters Histories of the Public
Service in South Africa PARI Short Essays number 1 Johannesburg PARI
Collinson M A and K Adazu (2006) The INDEPTH Network A demographic resource
on migration and urbanisation in Africa and Asia Views on Migration in Sub-Saharan
Africa Proceedings of an African Migration Alliance Workshop C Cross D
Gelderblom N Roux and J Mafukidze Cape Town HSRC Press 159- 172
Page | 95
Collinson M A (2006) Health Impacts of Social Transition A study of Female
Temporary Migration and its impact on Child Mortality in Rural South Africa A
dissertation submitted to the School of Public Health University of the Witwatersrand
in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master in Science in the branch of
Medicine
Cornwall A (2002) Making Spaces Changing Places Situating Participation in
Development Institute of Development Studies IDS Working Paper 170
Creswell J W (2009) Research Design Qualitative Quantitative and Mixed Methods
Approaches 3rd Edition Los Angeles Sage Publications Inc
Demacon 2014 Sethokga hostels mixed typology market analysis market research
Findings and recommendations
Department of Human Settlements Republic of South Africa Programmes and
Subsidies document assessed on 7 July 2015 from
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentspublicationshuman_settlement
s_programmes_and_subsidiespdf
Department of Social Development Republic of South Africa White Paper on
Families in South Africa 2012
Dyiki M (2006) City of Cape Town Integrating Families Hostels to Homes
Redevelopment Programme Presentation
httpswwwwesterncapegovzatext200652006_hostels_presentation-_dyikipdf
Fritz V and Menocal A R (2007) Understanding State-Building from a Political
Economy Perspective An Analytical and Conceptual Paper on Processes
Embedded Tensions and Lessons for International Engagement Report for DFIDrsquos
Effective and Fragile States Teams Overseas Development Institute
Greenberg S and Mathoho M (2010) ldquoConceptual Framework on Public
Participation and Developmentrdquo Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Page | 96
Grieger L et al (2013) Moving Out and Moving In Evidence of Short-Term Household
Change in South Africa from the National Income Dynamics Study
Goldblatt B amp Meintjes S (1996) Gender and the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission a submission to the TRC May
Harrison P And Kahn M (2002) The ambiguities of change the case of the planning
profession in the province of KwaZulu-Natal South Africa in Thornley A and Rydin Y
(eds) Planning in the global era Aldershot Ashgate
Jupp E and Inch A (2012) Planning as a profession in uncertain times Town Planning
Review Vol 83 No 5
Khan F and Thurman S (2001) Setting the Stage Current Housing Policy and
Debate in South Africa Isandla Institute
Liefa Consulting (2015) Maps diagrams source
LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor
report
Mapetla M M (2005) Aspects of urban housing for women and men in Southern
Africa Roma Lesotho National University of Lesotho
Marshall M N (1996) Sampling for qualitative research Family Practice Oxford
University Press
Mosoetsa S (2011) Eating from one pot the dynamics of survival in poor South
African households Johannesburg Wits University Press
Mdunyelwa M L (2015) Public Participation in Hostel Redevelopment Programs in
Nyanga and Langa Dissertation presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in
the Faculty of Arts and Social Science at Stellenbosch University
National Housing Report (2009) -
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentsnational_housing_20092_Techn
ical_General_Guidelines
Netshitenzhe J (2011) A Developmental State South Africarsquos developmental
Capacity UCT Summer School Mapungubwe Institute for Strategic Reflection
Page | 97
Peoples Housing Programme httpwwwjoburg-
archivecozacity_visionannualreport2002-03chapter10pdf
Pienaar J S and Cloete C E (2005) Hostel Conversion as Social Housing in South
Africa Funding Regime VS Real Needs Case Study of the Sethokga Hostel Conversion
Project Pacific Rim Real Estate Society (PRRES)
Pienaar J (2010) Community Residential Units key elements application implications
for Metros Municipal Leadership Housing Forum0
Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the Community Residential Units
Programme 2006
httpwwwgovzaabout-governmentgovernment-programmescommunity-
residential-unit-cru-programme
Ramphele M (1993) A Bed Called Home Life in the Migrant Labour Hostels of Cape
Town Ohio Ohio University Press
Segal L (1991) The Human Face of Violence Hostel dwellers speak In The Journal of
Southern African Studies Vol 18 No 1
SJN Development Planning Consultants (2000) Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial
Development Framework
South African Department of Housing 2008 Community Residential Programme
httpwwwhousinggovzaContentCRUHomehtm
South African Local Government Association
httpwwwsalgaorgzaappwebrootassetsfilesGuidelines20for20Municipalities
Flyer20rental20housing20NMApdf
South African Yearbook 20122013
httpwwwsouthafricanewyorknetconsulateYearbook2020131320Human20S
ettlemp
Statistics South Africa Census (2001) Concepts and Definitions Report
httpswwwStatistics+South+Africa+Census+(2001)+Concepts+and+Definitions+Repo
rt+03-02-26+Version
Thurman S (1997) Umzamo improving hostel dwellersrsquo accommodation in South
Africa Environment and Urbanisation Vol 9 No 2
Page | 98
Urban Sector Network Final Report August 2000 ndash April 2003 Hostel Redevelopment
httppdfusaidgovpdf_docsPdaby792pdf
Van der Berg S (2010) Current poverty and income distribution in the context of
South African history Stellenbosch Economic Working Papers 2210
Von Holdt K (2010) Nationalism Bureaucracy and Developmental State The South
African Case South African Review of Sociology Volume 41 Number 1
Watt A (2012) Essentials of project management
httpopentextbccaprojectmanagement
Ziehl S C (2001) Documenting Changing Family Patterns in South Africa Are Census
Data of any Value African Sociological Review 5(2)
Interviews with key informants
Shibambo Vincent Resident Engineer LTE Consulting Interview 14thAugust 2015
(Sethokga family units project site)
Mthethwa Jabu Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Housing Officer Interview 17
August 2015 (Ekurhuleni Kempton Park Housing Offices)
Mohlapamaswi Ward Councillor ANC Tembisa Ward 4 Interview 18 August 2015
(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers
Sololo Lufefe Ward 4 Economic Development Representative Interview 18 August
2015(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers)
Majikijela Sisa Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlements Sethokga
Hostel Conversion Project Manager Interview 19 August 2015 (Sethokga family units
project site boardroom)
Dyiki Malibongwe Housing Development Agency Official 7 September 2015
(Housing Development Agency head office Killarney Johannesburg)
Bako Simba Liefa Architects Interview 9 September (LTE House Sunninghill
Johannesburg)
Page | 8
Chapter one Introductory chapter15
1 Introduction15
11 Background to the study17
12 Rationale18
13 Problem statement18
14 Research question and sub-questions19
15 Significance of the study19
16 Aim and objectives of the research20
17 Research methodology20
171 Type of research20
172 What kind of information is needed22
173 Collecting data22
174 Sampling22
175 Ethical considerations23
18 Conclusion24
Chapter two Theoretical backdrop25
2 Introduction25
21 Contextualising hostels26
22 Key concepts theories ideas and arguments27
221 The historic model of hostels the conceptualisation of the hostel system28
222 Migration and the notion of migrant labour labourers as conceived under the
hostel system29
223 The notion of bedhold31
Page | 9
224 The stigma of hostel life31
225 Family versus household configurations32
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing33
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy35
228The role and significance of communitypublic participation in hostel conversion
projects35
23 Conclusion38
Chapter three Introducing Sethokga hostel39
3 Introduction39
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)39
311 Geographic description of the study area41
312 Locality44
313 Local and municipal context45
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel50
321 Built formArchitecture50
322 Municipal services54
323 The adjoining area55
33 Conclusion56
Chapter four The states approach to hostel conversion58
4 Introduction58
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach58
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach59
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme59
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process60
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing61
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised
Housing61
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country62
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme63
44 The Community Residential Units Programme65
45 Conclusion67
Chapter five The Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project68
5 Introduction68
Page | 10
51 Outline of the main components of the project68
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project68
512 Project phases69
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project70
521 Broad vision and aim of the project74
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and
in turn set to address those needs and challenges76
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project77
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful78
53 Visual narrative of the site of the family units79
531Architectural designsplans79
532 The project site of the family units82
533 Inside the family units84
53 Summary of main themes and findings86
54 Conclusion88
Chapter six Concluding chapter89
61 Review and reflections89
62 Limitations of the study91
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners91
64 Conclusion92
List of references94
Page | 11
Pages
Maps
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni
hostel and Vusimuzi hostel40
Map 2 Locality map44
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex45
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework48
Figures
Figure 1 Ground floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 2 First floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 3 Elevation of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 4 Collage of exterior imagery of the hostel50
Figure 5 Collage of interior imagery of the hostel52
Figure 6 Municipal amenities54
Figure 7 The adjoining area55
Figure 8 Community meeting agenda74
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga developmenthelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip76
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development planhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip79
Figure 11 Architects Section F-Fhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figue 12 Architects Section E-Ehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figure 13 South Elevation80
Figure 14 North Elevatonhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip81
Figure 15 East Elevation81
Figure 16 West Elevation81
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site82
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units84
Table
Table 1 Total workforce in the period December 2013 - January 2014 Sethokga
sitehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip72
Page | 12
ANC African National Congress
Cllr Councillor
CRU Community Residential Units
DoHS Department of Human Settlements
EMM Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
GPDHS Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement
HRP Hostel Redevelopment Programme
IDP Integrated Development Plan
IFP Inkatha Freedom Party
MSDF Metropolitan Spatial Development Framework
PWV Pretoria ndash Witwatersrand ndash Vereeniging
RDP Reconstruction and Development Programme
SDF Spatial Development Framework
USAID United States Agency for International Development
USN Urban Sector Network
Page | 13
Chapter one will essentially introduce the research report The aim of this chapter is as
follows highlight the objective of the study provide a background to the study and
also discuss the rationale and problem statement In addition to detailing the
research question the significance of this study and the research methodology will
also be reviewed
Coincidently this research report is written and takes place at a time where there has
been somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms With the prevailing question being ldquoWhat iscontinues to be the
role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo Although this study will not in effect
actively seek to answer that particular question it presents a valuable premise for this
study ldquoFamily units to address the stigma of hostel liferdquo
The main aim of this chapter is to contextualise hostel to position the study within an
expanded theoretical framework The main chapter will in part argue that hostels
have largely remained as urban enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric and
that the rigid structures of regulation and control which were imposed on hostel
dwellers have perpetuated a complex state of affairs The literature review section
which details some of the key concepts theories ideas and arguments on the topic
will elaborate further on this
This chapter aims to provide a comprehensive description of the study area and so it
is in this chapter that the local as well as municipal context of the study area will
altogether be considered The aim of this chapter is to provide the reader with a sort
of lsquofeelrsquo of Sethokga hostel and its present-day circumstance It will attempt to
articulate to the reader the authors own experience and account of the study area
Page | 14
in an effort to provide the reader with a well-versed narrative of the multifaceted
nature of the hostel and the complex reality in which its residents endure
The South African statersquos approach to hostel redevelopment conversion is
discussed It is argued that the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of hostel
redevelopment conversion Chapter four discusses a number of state policy and
approaches addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo Ahead of this however the evolution of the
hostel redevelopment conversion approach is examined which dates back to the
earliest (soon after 1994) efforts by the South African government to remedy the ills of
the hostel system
Chapter five examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seeks to unpack
the conceptualisation of the project This chapter reflects and draws extensively on
the findings of the field work and the invaluable insights offered by the key informants
The main components of the hostel conversion project are examined and the vision
of Sethokga personified by the hostel conversion project is presented in chapter five
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoSo what does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
Page | 15
Introductory chapter
In the wake of the political transition in South Africa in 1994 and for some time
preceding this time frame violence squalor overcrowding and socio-political strife
had long become characteristic of some of the features associated with hostels and
the stigma of hostel life (Thurman 1997) Due to its history as systematically
disempowered yet politically vocal enclaves we have come to know or perhaps be
familiar with hostels as highly contentious and antagonistic environments with a
burdened local identity (Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The stigma of hostel life constitutes among a host of conditions an innate reality
where the residents of hostels inhibit isolated destitute and unbecoming spaces
(Segal 1991) Built as single-sex labour compounds to accommodate African migrant
labourers for the duration of their stay in South Africarsquos white urban areas hostels
occupy a unique position within the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape
(Thurman 1997) As sojourners in South Africarsquos white urban areas the law
constructed a lsquolegalrsquo person called a labourer who was lsquoauthorisedrsquo to temporarily
reside in the urban space but had to retreat to their rural quarters once their lsquoservicersquo
had been concluded (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Thus to draw attention to the
unkindness of their living conditions many hostel dwellers have continued for the
better part of South Africarsquos democracy to lsquochoosersquo physical violence as a tool
perceived to best serve and afford some attention to their troubles (Pienaar and
Crofton 2005)
Within the context of this research report the term hostels widely refer to single-sex
dormitory style labour compounds which emerged in South Africa under the
apartheid system and ideology of separate development (Pienaar and Crofton
2005) The ideology of separate development and the resultant influx control policies
were a distinctive trait of the government of a particular juncture in the countryrsquos
history - a government that as part of its mandate held to discourage the permanent
settlement of the African populace in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) This further
translated itself in the governmentrsquos refusal to plan and consent to any sort of
lsquomeaningfulrsquo investment into areas designated for the other who were primarily
located in the townships on the periphery of the urban terrain (Ramphele 1993)
Page | 16
Badly designed poorly built and suffering many years of neglect hostels were
primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for the comfort of hostel
dwellers (Thurman 1997) Conceivably the hostel system socialised its inhabitants into
an undignified and callous condition which has in some respect persisted and has
unfortunately not wholly been reconciled (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In hostels that
were male occupied hostel dwellers were regarded as lsquomen of four worldsrsquo which
referred to their present and existing life within the hostel the surrounding township(s)
places of work and their rural homes (Segal 1991) The hostel system made it
impossible for hostel dwellers to live in the hostel with their families ie wives
husbands partners children (Segal 1991) This consequence is particularly important
to note at this early stage in the report because of the wisdom and context it adds as
the study progresses
Coincidently this research is written and takes place at a time where there has been
somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms Undoubtedly the prevailing question has been ldquoWhat is should be
the role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo The current Minister of Human
Settlements has said that ldquohostels no longer have a place within South Africarsquos
democratically reconfigured state and so the state needs to get rid of hostelsrdquo (Sisulu
2015) However in a nation such as South Africa efforts towards transition are
ambiguous complex and can often be marked by violence (Mosoetsa 2011)
According to Thurman (1997) of an estimated 604 000 hostel beds around the country
in the late 1990s accommodated whole families relatively close to urban centres
Furthermore Thurman argues that hostels present both a significant challenge and an
opportunity for government NGOs developers and hostel dwellers themselves High
density housing stock stood to gain a considerably large supply of low income
(Thurman 1997) Even while a large number of hostel redevelopmentconversion
projects continue to be riddled with tension and difficulty the prospect(s) for change
and reform that they offer cannot simply be dismissed
This study seeks to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel conversion project to
develop an informed understanding of the defining features and characteristics of
this particular hostel conversion project It examines what is and what has been the
nature of engagement and dialogue between the various stakeholders involved and
discusses the insights they were able to offer to this study In 2015 21 years into South
Page | 17
Africarsquos democracy we have to wonder what is needed to make amends and offset
the dishonour of hostel life
11 Background to the study
We have to understand what the hostel system did was to lsquoaccommodatersquo the
African populace in single-sex labour compounds (Segal 1991) Upon their arrival
their presence in urban areas was constrained as they were met with strict rules and
restrictions (Ramphele 1993) In turn social relations were severally volatile and
ambiguous under the hostel system as hostel dwellers were constrained in their ability
to interact in certain or in their own chosen ways (Thurman 1997) There have been a
number of authors who have noted that the notion of family was partly if not entirely
redefined under this system (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were designed with little or no
thought given of human comfort security and interaction and many are still in
appalling neglected and overcrowded conditions (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) For
many people hostels represent a bitter and hopeless reminder of the past while for
others they are a well prized and affordable shelter in an environment of serve
homelessness (Thurman 1997)
Accordingly soon after 1994 South Africarsquos democratic government made some
attempt to convert hostels into environments suitable for family life although the
extent of this has not entirely been clear (DoHS 2015) This was met with hostility
violence and unwillingness by some hostel dwellers particularly those in the Pretoria
Witwatersrand and Vereeniging (PWV) region to have their hostels
convertedredeveloped into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010) The
violence that had become synonymous with hostel life became an overwhelming
impediment that proved difficult to overcome (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that the idea of an unambiguous constant and unrestricted
presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a point of contention for
some of the men who had far too long become accustomed to living lsquoalonersquo as
men Some expressed unwillingness while others found it a struggle to comprehend or
endorse this change that seemed far too unfamiliar and a challenge to come to
grips with (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Thus in hostels where hostel conversion projects have since taken-off the general
attitudes perceptions and reception of the projects have in some respects continued
to be negative and unwelcomed Scepticism tension and hostility add to the already
complex nature of the hostel conversion projects (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
Page | 18
2010) Hostels are still largely spaces confronted with deep social injustices (ie poor
living conditions a lack of privacy overcrowded) and are an insult to the dignity of
their occupants in several ways as both spatially limited and socio-economically
limiting spaces (Ramphele 1993) The limits imposed by hostels onto hostel dwellers
have persisted in protracting unkindness and a distorted conception of the
fundamental purpose of housing Hostels remain as an unfortunate symbol of a
former governmentrsquos refusal and failure to acknowledge the personhood (the
position and quality of being an individual or having feelings perspectives integrity
and human characteristics needs and wants) of the men and women they housed
(Ramphele 1993)
12 Rationale
Arguably hostel conversion projects and particularly the conceptualisation of these
projects is still a relatively under-researched field Based on my efforts to find
published work on the subject and even though there have been a number of
hostels across the country which have undergone or are undergoing hostel
conversion this remains a rather neglected study field
Hostels within their historic make-up were for the most part premised on fairly uniform
ideals arrangements and gender configurations The demographic setting within
some hostels across the country have since become a lot more fluid and departed
from their former mandatory construct (as strictly single-sex spaces) In what were
predominantly male occupied hostels women and children have since moved into
some of those hostels
Sethokga hostel which will serve as the case study for this research is a hostel that is
still predominantly male occupied but is undergoing hostel conversion to convert the
hostel into family units I believe that the fact that the hostel is still predominantly
male occupied presents an intriguing dimension to this study on hostel conversion
and efforts to grapple with the research question
13 Problem statement
In the case of Sethokga hostel a hostel conversion project is underway but it is not
clear what has sparked such a conversion and to what extent it is driven by the
available policies or assessments of needs or what attempt has been made to meet
these needs Subsequently what would the conversion of a predominantly male
Page | 19
dominated hostel rife with historically inherent conditions necessitate Therefore
how has the conversion project grasped the experience of men within such a hostel
and how has it grasped the concept of family life
14 Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units been conceptualised and
based upon the conceptualised ideas does it address the stigma of hostel life and it
what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What led to the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail What is the broad aim and vision
of the project What is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
15 The significance of the study - positioning the study relative to existing academic
literature
The significance of this research report lies in what I believe is a gap in the scope of
work covered over the years on hostels particularly on hostel conversion projects
Based on my efforts to find published work on the subject questions around what
these projects entail their implications relevance and impact remain unanswered
In the work I have managed to access so far this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects has somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore there needs to be more inquiry and study
conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel conversion
projects
As documented by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) there are vast and intricate
layers of engagement communication participation and even discontentment
Page | 20
involved in hostel conversion projects For instance the legitimacy around where
decision-making lies and which avenues are or should be available to voice
concerns have been some of the challenges relating to hostel conversion and have
added to the already complex nature of these projects
There is most certainly room for a study to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel
conversion project and probe this idea that family units could serve as an adequate
tool for the apt reform of hostels as many of us have come to know them associate
with them or even disassociate from them
16 Aim and objectives of the research
The main aim of this research report is to examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project and how the project has been conceptualised
Objectives
To examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
To develop a more comprehensive understanding of the hostel conversion
approach relative to the socio-economic and political context of the hostel
To explore the possibility and potential of family units as a viable tool to
addressing the stigma of hostel life
To examine how the project has understood the needs and challenges of the
residents and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
To examine the specific spatial focus of the project
17 Research methodology
171 Type of research
The methodology used in the study is a qualitative approach to research and semi-
structured interviews were conducted as the primary means of data collection
Additionally the data collection process involved the use of a variety of sources
which ranged from books journal articles newspaper articles and online media
platforms in the form of articles and radio podcasts
Page | 21
According to Cresswell (2009) this particular method to research (a qualitative
method) entails among other things the use of horizontal dialogue conversation and
the exchange of ideas between the interviewer and the interviewees (Cresswell
2009) Key informants were identified on the basis of their knowledge of andor
involvement in the Sethokga hostel conversion project and the following individuals
were interviewed
1st interviewee Mr Vincent Shibambo resident engineer with LTE consulting (the
company facilitating the construction and administration of the project) Interview
conducted 14th August 2015 at the project site The interview took place in the
boardroom of the project site offices
2nd interviewee Mr Jabu Mthethwa housing officer from the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality Interview conducted 17th August 2015 the interview took place in Mr
Mthethwarsquos office at the council offices in the Kempton Park CBD area
3rd interviewee ANC Ward 4 Tembisa Ward Councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi Interview
conducted 18th August 2015 in the ward councillorrsquos office at the ward councillors
chambers situated adjacent to the project site offices within the vicinity of the hostel
4th interviewee Mr Lufefe Sololo Ward 4 Tembisa Economic Development Rep (Mr
Sololo sits on the ward committee that advises the ward councillor) Interview
conducted 18th of August 2015 at Sethokga hostel
5th interviewee Mr Sisa Majikijela official from the Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlements Mr Majikijela is the current project manager of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project Interview conducted 19th of August 2015 in the boardroom
of the project site offices
6th interviewee Mr Malibongwe Dyiki who was a resident of a hostel in Cape Town in
the early 1980s He then became a community representative in later years and then
moved on to be a government official facilitating hostel redevelopments in the
Western Cape He has written and published on hostels and has also participated in
policy discussions on the Hostel Redevelopment Programme Interview was done on
the 7th of September 2015 at the Housing Development Agencyrsquos head office in
Killarney Johannesburg where he is currently working as the Programme Manager for
the mining towns programme
7th interviewee Simba Bako architect with Liefa Architects (appointed by LTE
consulting Liefa Architects were responsible for the design of the family units)
Page | 22
Interview conducted on the 9th of September 2015 at LTE House in Sunninghill
Johannesburg
172 What kind of information is needed
The kind of information that was needed was information which contextualised the
study area within its broader local and municipal context Pre-existing data
particularly demographic and statistical data on the hostel and its surroundings
Ekurhulenirsquos Integrated Development Plan the Metrorsquos Spatial Development
Framework and information that would give an overview of the geographic social
economic and possibly even the political context of the study area is needed
Moreover project reports studies memorandums or minutes and state policy on
hostel conversion would also be useful
173 Collecting data
In collecting data there were a number of methods and tools that were used which
involved moments of ad hoc discussion and deliberation around the topic What was
invigorating and always thrilling was peoplersquos interest and curiosity regarding this
study The impromptu encounter(s) with people who were open and ready to share
their point of views and experience(s) honestly made the data collection process
that much easier
There was a considerable amount of time spent on examining literature books
articles (both academic and media sources) sources on the internet and journals
Collecting data also involved examining similar programmes and projects on hostel
conversionredevelopment so collecting desktop data and consulting library sources
was an invaluable part of collecting data
174 Sampling
The study sample is important for any research The choice between qualitative
quantitative or even the consideration of using a mixed methods approach should
be determined by the research question and not decided subjectively In grappling
with the research question it seemed most appropriate for the purpose of this study to
make use of a qualitative approach It was believed that a qualitative approach
Page | 23
would provide the necessary framework to respond to the research question and
address the aim and objectives of the study In answering the lsquohowrsquo and lsquowhyrsquo
questions that the study would pose a qualitative approach would engage in a sort
of comprehensive exploration of the many-sided and possibly complex dynamics of
the Sethokga hostel conversion project For this reason a qualitative interview-
centred approach was used (Marshall 1996)
Marshall (1996) argues that there are three broad methods commonly used in
selecting a study sample that is convenience judgement and theoretical sampling
techniques Convenience sampling involves the most accessible person(s) it is the
least time consuming requires the least effort and financing Judgement sampling
also referred to as purposeful sampling is according to Marshall (1996) the most
widely used sampling technique With judgement sampling the researcher
purposefully and actively selects a sample that would best respond to their research
question and in principle convenience is set aside While theoretical sampling
involves a process of selection of a sample that is mainly driven by and rooted in a
theoretical position the sample is selected to examine or elaborate a particular
theory (Marshall 1996)
For the purpose of this study the judgemental sampling technique was used and this
entailed the active and purposeful selection of what Marshall refers to as lsquosubjectsrsquo
with particular expertise ie key informants The sample selection was based on my
prior experience and practical knowledge of the study area The limitation however
was that there were quite a number of elaborate and contentious issues at play
which within the limits of this study could not be explored at length on account of
time constraints and the particular focus of this study
175 Ethical considerations
As a young female scholar entering into a rather conflicted lsquotoughrsquo and culturally-
laden environment I was faced with what was an apparent concern for safety and
so on my trips to the hostel I was always accompanied by my father or a friend
Initially my intention was to interview some of the hostel residents but the sensitivities
around the harshness of their living conditions were highlighted as a possible area of
vulnerability and the spate of xenophobia attacks particularly in and around hostels
suggested reconsideration As a researcher I ensured that the participants were all
Page | 24
well aware and informed that their participation was voluntary and they were at
liberty to withdraw their involvement at any stage The interviewees were informed of
the choice to remain anonymous if they wished and that the information they shared
would be used to develop this research report Thus my ethical obligation as a
researcher was to ensure that I did minimal harm and unintentional damage through
my research that I conducted myself responsibly and professionally at all times and
that I reported accurately what I found including unforeseen and even negative
findings
18 Conclusion
Hostels consolidated the migrant labour system They served not only to control the
number of black labour residing in urban areas but also to manage its behaviour As
hostels were designed to be unattractive and uncomfortable many comparisons
have been made between hostels and institutions such as army barracks and prisons
There is a window of opportunity in promoting hostel conversion but injecting
resources into previously marginalised communities have resulted and is resulting in
conflict local power struggles and competition for those resources (Thurman 1997)
The next chapter will discuss the theoretical backdrop of this study and elaborate on
key concepts theories ideas and arguments that have been of particular relevance
to unpacking the research question
Page | 25
Theoretical backdrop
2 Introduction
It is imperative at this point to contextualise the term hostels so as to clearly il lustrate
what is meant by it This section of the report will contextualise the term hostels and it
will examine key concepts theories ideas and arguments that are of particular
relevance to the study
Furthermore chapter two argues that hostels have largely remained as urban
enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
It argues that the rigid structures of regulation and control that were imposed upon
the former inhabitants of hostels were essentially just one part of a multi-faceted and
disconcerting circumstance that has continued to live on within a large number of
hostels (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012) This view that hostels operated and in some
respect continue to operate under a complex set of circumstances is shared and
supported by the work of authors such as Segal (1991) Ramphele (1993) Goldblatt
and Meintjes(1996) Thurman (1997) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) Dyiki (2006) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) Subsequently some of their work will be used to
unpack the research question and draw on certain aspects that resonate with the
case study The following abridged abstract describes some of the complexities
around hostels and the views captured in the work of some of the authors mentioned
above
According to Segal (1991) hostel life and the regulations imposed upon hostel
dwellers made it extremely difficult to maintain family life that is men would leave
their families in the rural areas for long periods of time to find work in the city
Ramphele (1993) notes that the families of the men would then became reliant for
their survival upon the remittance of the men Mapetla (2005) makes a compelling
argument that suggests that within contemporary society men are traditionally
culturally and even spiritually still regarded as the head the protector and provider of
their families even as the lines delineating the roles of men and women within
contemporary society have become faint and more fluid Arguably hostels still exist
within a highly complex setting (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Page | 26
21 Contextualising hostels
Generally hostels were badly designed poorly built and many have been suffering
years of neglect (Thurman 1997) Hostels were primarily built to accommodate
African migrant workers for the containment of their labour over the duration of their
stay in what were demarcated as South Africarsquos white urban areas (Thurman 1997)
There are notably three types of hostels namely public sector private sector and
grey sector hostels (Ramphele 1993)
Public sector hostels are hostels that were built and managed by provincial or local
authorities and mainly accommodated workers across a range of sectors (Ramphele
1993) Private sector hostels were built by private sector enterprise to house private
sector labourers who would mainly be working in the factories and mines (Pienaar
and Crofton 2005) Grey sector hostels were built on public sector-owned land by the
private sector under some form of contractual agreement with a government
authority (provincial or local) but were largely managed and controlled by private
sector employers (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Public and grey sector hostels were
generally situated in the townships (Thurman 1997) However when they were
planned these hostels were generally located on the outskirts of the cities but with
increased urban growth they now relatively tend to be more centrally situated
(Thurman 1997)
Ramphele (1993) argued that each hostel had a distinct form and quality about it
Elements of tribalism certain customs systems of belief and association dimensions of
conflict and conflict resolution were not homogeneous across all hostels (Ramphele
1993) The type of work that the migrant labourers did across the sectors they worked
was often rudimentary It ranged from unskilled to very basic semi-skilled work and it
was quite labour intensive in return for meagre earnings (Ramphele 1993)
Historically hostels were characterised by two main geographic classifications firstly
hostels in the backdrop of an urban context (ie also referring to inner city hostels)
and secondly hostels in the areas around mines (Segal 1991) According to Segal
(1991) urban context hostels had a more diffused grouping of hostel dwellers than
their mining counterparts (Segal 1991) Hostels in urban context developed broader
and somewhat complex relations with the outside community This contrasted with
the extreme isolation of hostel dwellers in hostels around the mines Therefore hostels
in the urban context were to a lesser extent conceived to be lsquomore openrsquo and lsquoless
strictly controlledrsquo However both were essentially sites of control and exploitation
Page | 27
with clearly marked physical boundaries in form of high walls and fences with single
and restricted entry and exit points (Segal 1991)
Hostels in urban areas had government bureaucracies responsible for their
management and maintenance as opposed to a single employercompany (Segal
1991) Moreover hostels in the urban context accommodated a wider and more
diverse range of workers who did not necessarily work for the same
employercompany or have uniform working hours or shifts In urban hostels ethnicity
was not the official organiser of hostel dwellers as men from different backgrounds
and homelands would and could share rooms (Ramphele 1993) Lastly and perhaps
the most important distinguishing feature of the two was the fact that hostels in urban
areas were not under the extensive force of lsquototal controlrsquo as was the experience of
mining hostel dwellers (Segal 1991 Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
According to Pienaar and Crofton (2005) public sector hostels accommodated the
largest number of hostel dwellers Overall the quality of living environment of hostels
was generally poor but this was particularly bad in public sector hostels (Ramphele
1993) Additionally the administrative processes and management of public sector
hostels was under dire strain as no clear records of those that lived in the hostels or
those entering and exiting the hostel were kept (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that although private sector hostels were considered to be
better managed and maintained The general state of all hostels whether public or
privately owned was largely characterised by poor living conditions a lack of
privacy the sharing of very limited spaces a distressed local context and
overcrowded conditions (Ramphele 1993) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) further note
that around the early 1980s hostel residents simply started to withdraw from payment
of rentals and thus the maintenance of the hostels grew even thinner and steadily
non-existent Public sector hostels grew especially financially and politically
unmanageable (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
22 Key concepts theories ideas and arguments
To unpack the research question and contextualise the study within a broader
theoretical framework this section of the report will discuss and draw on a number of
concepts theories ideas and arguments
Page | 28
221 The historic model of hostels the conceptualisation of the hostel system
In grappling with the historic model of the hostel system this section of the report will
discuss two main themes The conceptualisation of the hostel system and migration
migrant labour as conceived under the hostel system It illustrates the effect hostels
have had on shaping the lives and experiences of their inhabitants in unique and
complex ways (Thurman 1997)
South Africa is a country marked by a legacy of systematic discrimination and the
deliberate disempowerment of a lsquocategoryrsquo of its population (Thurman 1997) Hostels
were established supported and perpetuated by methodical policy frameworks and
brute controls to discourage the permanent settlement of the in historically lsquowhite
areasrsquo (Segal 1991) Thurman (1997) argues that hostels occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are symbolic of three centuries of
systematic racial discrimination
Seemingly ignited by and originating in the mining industry in the nineteenth century
the construction of hostels reached a peak during the 1960s and 1970s in the period
that has been referred to as the ldquogrand apartheidrdquo years (Thurman 1997) They were
built as single-sex dormitory compounds to accommodate African migrant labourers
as sojourners in what were delineated as white urban areas (Ramphele 1993) In
hostels which were intended strictly for male migrant labourersrsquo job-seeking by
African women was criminalised and a deliberate policy not to provide family
housing was pursued (Ramphele 1993)
Common to hostels was the blurring and hostility of the boundaries between the
hostel dwellers place(s) of work and their living spaces (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) In
turn some authors have argued that hostels in some sense functioned as a lsquototal
institutionrsquo According to Segal (1991) and Ramphele (1993) geographically many
hostels were isolated and situated literally at the edges of urban areas and society in
general They were primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for
human comfort safety or enrichment (Thurman 1997) The heavy-handedness of the
hostel system imposed a cunning inferiority complex a sense of no escape yet quite
interestingly a later unwillingness and indifference to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have
their hostel converted into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Ramphele (1993) and Segal (1991) make a rather compelling argument and share
the view that the behaviour and conduct of some of the hostel dwellers against
Page | 29
having their hostel converted into family units is indicative of similar behaviour and
actions displayed by long-term prisoners and people contained in barracks They
argue that a substantial number of long-term inmates would in some instances
display great unwillingness and some difficulty to the prospect of re-entering society
after being socialised into a total institution a reformatory (Ramphele 1993 and
Segal 1991) According to a text by Statistics South Africa (2001) an institution can be
defined as a communal place of residence for persons with common characteristics
(Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001) One could then argue
that one of the common characteristics shared by many hostels was the migrant
labourer status attributed to them (Dyiki 2006)
222 Migration and the notion of migrant labour labourers as conceived under the hostel
system
Castles and Miller (2008) argues that all through time and space individuals and
families have been migrating and doing so for a number of reasons Universally the
migration lsquophenomenonrsquo was and has been as a result of varying factors and in
response to certain causes and events such as demographic growth environmental
changes development vs underdevelopment and the seeking of lsquobetterrsquo
opportunities (Castles and Miller 2008) Others have turned to migration to seek jobs
often located or perceived to be concentrated in larger urban centres (Collinson
and Adazu 2006 Castles and Miller 2008)
Migration can occur as a voluntary or forced process This study is particularly
interested in the event of migration that becomes forced migration when the
circumstances of individuals and families leave them little or no choice but to pursue
lsquohopersquo away from their native home-base (Castles and Miller 2008) Arguably this was
characteristic of the hostel model Hostels enabled mines and later other industries to
suppose and cause that hostel dwellers had homes in rural areas (Collinson 2006)
Seemingly the rural populace was the lsquodesiredrsquo workforce ushered into the city and
mines and exploited as labourers for the development of the urban-based economy
(Thurman 1997)
According to Thurman (1997) the residents of hostels were typically considered as
rural traditionalists and lsquodangerousrsquo outsiders by the residents of townships which
surrounded the hostel Their physical as well as social isolation meant that they often
retained strong links with their rural home-base (Segal 1991) This involved the
Page | 30
periodic movement of individual household members between the hostel and their
rural homes (Thurman 1997) The ruralurban linkages which were subsequently
fashioned became a distinguishing feature of not just hostel dwellers but the black
African populace and as a part of their experience of urban life (Collinson and
Adazu 2006) The costly urban world was thus considered by many as merely a place
of work (Segal 1991 and Ramphele 1993)
This type of migration - also often referred to as lsquocircularrsquo or lsquooscillatingrsquo migration -
became characteristic of a sort of temporary sentiment to life and living in the city
(Dyiki 2006) Additionally the events of circular migration presented certain
household dynamics and challenges in maintaining the often faint links between the
migrant and the households family left behind (Collionson 2006 Ramphele 1993)
Conceivably hostel dwellers have for a long time had a common rural orientation
(Segal 1991) ldquoIt has been repeatedly demonstrated that migrants do not leave
behind the countryside in their journey to the cityrdquo and this rural consciousness has
remained central to the migrant labour population (Segal 1991 9)
Within contemporary society the concept of lsquothe new economies of labour
migrationrsquo has emerged as an alternative position and argues that migration can be
and has become a household strategy (Collinson and Adazu 2006) According to
Collinson and Adazu (2006) within their analysis of contemporary migration patterns
migration has now largely become something that is purposefully chosen by
members of a household family This phenomenon involves the temporary migration
of some individuals within the household family in pursuit of opportunities towards
the collective betterment of the family household or even their broader community
(Collinson and Adazu 2006) Under this model of migration family and community
networks are considered to play an important and supporting role in facilitating
migration between urban-based and village-based households families (Collinson
and Adazu 2006) What is then required of the migrant is thatheshe reciprocate the
initial support offered by hisher household family community as received in hisher
rural-base (Collinson and Adazu 2006)
While in some respect migration is becoming a lsquolonged-forrsquo process and somewhat of
a deliberate choice on the other hand adverse circumstances force families
households to partake in this process as a means of survival (Collinson and Adazu
2006) The ability of migrants to maintain both an urban and rural residence in
whatever context ie historic or contemporary continues to present a social
geographic and economically complex state of affairs (Pienaar and Crofton (2005)
Page | 31
223 The notion of bedhold
The context of hostels designed to be uncomfortable and uninviting the closest
likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo was in the form of a bed Every aspect of life and
survival in hostels revolved around a bed (Ramphele 1993) According to Ramphele
(1993) this in turn perpetuated a circumstance of lsquoclientelismrsquo and blurred the lines of
patronage when it came to the exchanging of the membership of beds and when
beds were to be allocated or reallocated (Ramphele 1993) The ill-defined and fluid
relationship of patronage between bed-holders would in some respect function like
and resemble households (Ramphele 1993 Segal 1991 Mosoetsa 2011)
In some sense bed-holders assumed an intermediary role and served an informal
function as lsquolandlordsrsquo thus as proprietors of the bedhold (Ramphele 1993) Hostel
dwellers became lsquobed-holdersrsquo rather than lsquohouse-holdersrsquo in the urban space
(Segal 1991) It became unduly problematic that the bed was the only space over
which they could have any measure of control It after all distorted the perceptions
hostel dwellers developed of themselves in relation to their environment constraining
them to varying degrees (Ramphele 1993) Ramphele (1993) argues that the limits set
by physical space in hostels also defined in very clear terms the inside versus the
outside security versus insecurity family versus non-family and urban versus rural She
further argues that onersquos very identify in the hostel and their lsquolegal existencersquo in the
urban space depended on their attachment to a bed (Ramphele 1993) According
to Ramphele (1993) the bed acted as a sort of mediator thus lsquoa go-betweenrsquo the
hostel dwellers and the rest of society to which they remain somewhat disconnected
and possibly indifferent (Ramphele 1993)
224 The stigma of hostel life
The stigma of hostel life gave a rather conspicuous meaning to lsquoblack urban lifersquo and
their experience(s) of life in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were badly
designed poorly built and many suffer years of neglect (Thurman 1997) There have
been a number of authors who have argued that hostel dwellers suffered a great
injustice to their humanity their perception of self constrained relations with others
and a constant struggle to maintain family networks with their often rural-base
(Goldblatt and Mentjies 1996)
Page | 32
The living conditions in hostels have been expressed in basic terms as shocking
disgusting inhumane cruel and intolerable by both scholars and residents of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Hostel accommodation is undesirable both aesthetically and
conceptually and there are a number of common features which characterise most
hostels a lack of privacy overcrowded and poor living conditions very limited space
and a serious state of disrepair (Ramphele 1993) Failing to delineate private
personal space the purpose of hostels was to ensure a compliant labour force (Segal
1991)
According to Ramphele (1993) hostels represent physical space that is not only
limited but is also limiting Ramphele makes a distinction between the circumstance
and living arrangements of hostel dwellers and township residents Arguing that
although physical overcrowding of sleeping accommodation between the two
(hostel dwellers and township residents) many not be much different in terms of the
ratio of people to roomsbeds (Ramphele 1993) For township residents it is most likely
that they would be sharing these limited facilities with kin or friends rather than
complete strangers (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of hostels some men
women may adapt too well to living in single-sex hostels and would find change too
difficult to cope with (Ramphele 1993)
225 Family versus household configurations
The terms family and household are not necessarily synonymous According to the
Department of Social Development (2012) ldquoa household comprises of either (i) a
single person who makes provision(s) for hisher food or other essentials for living or (ii)
a group of at least two or more people living together who make common provision
for their food and other essentialsrdquo (White Paper on Families in South Africa 2012 11)
Moreover the Department notes that a household can contain a family yet the
members of the household are not always necessarily a family further remarking that
ldquoa household performs the functions of providing a place of dwelling and the sharing
of resources and these functions can be performed among people who are related
by blood or people without any such relationshiprdquo (White Paper on Families in South
Africa 2012 11) This distinction of family and household configurations is useful to this
study for two main reasons (a) as it has been suggested that one of the broad aims of
the hostel conversion approach is to introduce facilitate lsquofamily lifersquo and to inject a
family quality into these historically single-sex environments (b) Is it then supposed by
the Sethokga hostel conversion project that the household configurations in the
hostel are at present existing wholly in the absence of family configurations
Page | 33
It is important to be mindful of the fact that with time households have become
more complex and family structures more diffused (Mosoetsa 2011) Hostel dwellers
through years of living under space constraints and in single-sex accommodation
have developed certain ideologies practices and habits (Thurman 1997) Arguably
the hostel system redefined and reshaped family and household configurations and
constructed a complex social setting (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of male
occupied hostels relationships among men are characterised by hierarchy and
Ramphele (1993) notes that this is legitimised by lsquotraditionrsquo and is based on age
differences The older men are more likely to occupy positions of authority and be
regarded as the lsquoheadsrsquo of the household and in authority to organise the affairs of
the household Whereas the younger men would be cast in the role of attending to
duties considered lsquotypicalrsquo to women and that is the upkeep of the household ie
cleaning cooking In this lsquomanrsquos worldrsquo tradition and age regulate the day-to-day
function of the household (Ramphele 1993) The links between the men and the
families they had have left behind has arguably become increasingly scant and
incoherent (Grieger et al 2013) With the blurring of their lsquobindingrsquo reciprocal
obligations and support the conception of family life was redefined and put under
considerable strain as a result of migrant labour laws and the criminalisation of job-
seeking activity in urban areas of their rural wives partners (Segal 1991)
In both family and household configurations shared obligations and mutual support
takes many forms (Mapetla 2005) The family structure is perceived to be the
lsquocommander and regulator of the activities and conduct of the individual members
The family structure has been set apart from a household in that a household is more
of a residential unit where related andor none-related individuals in a sense lsquoeat
from the same potrsquo (Mosoetsa 2011) In some cases the individuals and members of
a household provide themselves jointly with food andor other essentials however a
household can also consist of a person who lives alone The distinguishing feature is
that a family configuration consists of people individuals who have a blood-kin
connection and this can include immediate and extended relatives but the same
does not necessarily always hold true for household configurations (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005 Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001)
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing
South Africa can still somewhat be regarded as a traditionally patrilineal society
where land and property are traced through the male lineage where upon marriage
Page | 34
a woman is required to leave her native home to reside with her husband at his home
(Mapetla 2005) This system has been more inclined to empower men (Ziehl 2001)
Subsequently within contemporary society and within the lsquonew politics of gender
relationsrsquo property and land ownership have since become a highly contentious
subject Therefore the issue of housing is quite a significant one and warrants some
reflection particularly the aspect of men and housing (Mapetla 2005)
Gender roles have steadily been changing and are increasingly becoming ill-defined
(Ziehl 2001) So how can or rather how should housing projects and interventions
such as hostel conversion projects be more gender sensitive inclusive representative
and reflective of the changing gender roles both in a social and spatial sense
Gender considerations regarding housing and housing projects need to be mindful of
the innate differentiation between men and women and their not always uniform
needs and interaction(s) with space (Mapetla 2005) The often male bias when it
comes to access to housing might just further be perpetuated through hostel
conversion projects The question here is then does this new conception of a
reconfigured living environment in the form of family units make provision(s) towards
addressing any of the housing-related gender biases What do these projects
consider important in terms of gender issues if at all how have these issues been
factored into the projects
Gender and housing related theory has often argued strongest the case of women in
their inability to access housing land the law and related funding (Ziehl 2001) The
issues of gender relations and access to housing have become increasingly topical
(Mosoetsa 2011) Womenrsquos rights access to the law resources and social amenities
have been areas which have gained a significant amount of traction in both policy
and academic circles owing to historically discriminatory laws (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005) However in South Africa and perhaps this is true for many other
societies traditionally culturally and even spiritually men are still to a significant extent
regarded as the head of household the foremost provider for their families (Mapetla
2005)
Within the context of hostels migrant labour laws which also made it a point that the
remuneration of its African labour workforce was as horrendous as the conditions they
lived in shaped a particular aspect of menrsquos relation to housing in the urban context
and their experiences (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In a study conducted by Segal
(1991) a group of men living in a hostel were interviewed to give their account of life
in the hostel According to Segal (1991) it became apparent that the men tolerated
the hostel because they felt humiliated by even the thought of losing their roles as the
Page | 35
provider for their family Some men suggested that they could and would not bring
their wives or children to the hostel for even a brief visit (Segal 1991) In their minds
they were better off alone in the citymine because the burden of their own survival
was already enormous (Segal 1991)
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy
Large sections of the South African state have continued to be institutionally
ineffective unsustainable and dysfunctional (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert 2011) Post-
1994 efforts towards nation-building and state formation in the country have taken
many forms a unitary state the inauguration of a new president of the Republic of
South Africa and the promulgation of the 1996 Constitution of the Republic(Barnet
1999) Furthermore the ideals of nation building and state formation would attempt
to diffuse into a sound and convergent form what was once opposite and adverse
(von Holdt 2010)
The housing deficit in the country was and has continued to be one of the greatest
challenges facing the government particularly the inadequate provision and access
to housing for the black majority who had been rendered destitute and occupying
dreadful accommodation (Thurman 1997) In what could better be regarded as
temporary disaster relief areas than housing suitable for any human to call lsquohomersquo
(Ramphele 1993) Post-apartheid bureaucratic inefficiency class formation
redundant budgetary rituals antagonistic attitudes towards public service vocation
and authority has greatly stifled service delivery imperatives ie social housing
provision (von Holdt 2010) Undoubtedly the role of policy towards addressing issues
such as housing and service delivery is a significant one (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert
2011) this will be discussed further in chapter four
228 The role and significance of community public participation in hostel conversion to
family unitrsquos projects
Public participation in any context is a complex and at times a contentious exercise
Academic literature on community public participation tends to presuppose an
experience or existence of informal unambiguous or authentic relations in
community participation processes (Mdunyelwa 2015) This particularly in housing
related projects and programmes with the assumption that if all the stakeholders
involved are consulted the process of participation is likely to yield positive results and
success (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) In South Africa the notion of public
Page | 36
community participation has gained popularity as a democratic practice essential
for development and nation-building (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their research project entitled ldquoA
Case Study of participation in the City Deep Hostel Redevelopmentrdquo suggests that
there are more complex and less diffused forces at play According to Benit-Gbaffou
and Mathoho (2010) the central question often becomes when and at what point
can one say people have effectively or meaningfully participated This question is
especially relevant and significance to hostel conversion projects and to efforts to re-
configure hostels as lsquofamily units suitable for family lifersquo (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010) According to state policy the hostel conversion redevelopment approach is
and has been a nation-wide intervention initiated by the post-1994 government to
redevelop convert hostels in efforts to de-stigmatise these historically-laden spaces
(Dyiki 2006) Moreover the current Minister of Human Settlement has of late stated
on a number of media platforms the hostel conversion approach also seeks to
rehabilitate these historically single-sex migrant labour compounds into family
apartmentsunits to promote a family-oriented setting (Sisulu 2015) According to a
2001 text by Statistics South Africa ldquoconverted or upgraded hostels should be treated
in the same way as a block of flats and each unit considered as a separate housing
unitrdquo (Statistics South Africa Census2001 3)
The importance and usefulness of public community participation in hostel
conversion projects have been a widely and overly debated topic However this
does not wholly take away from the fact that there are many and varied obstacles
and challenges when it comes to the actual practice and experience of
participation on the ground (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) Even while the political
and socio-economic contexts of every project are varied with different structures and
the coordination of stakeholders take on different forms (Mdunyelwa 2015) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) argue that participation has often become a political
process riddled in processes of negotiation and rampant differences of opinion
coupled with a mix of personal andor political ambitions (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010)
Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their study of the City Deep Hostel
Redevelopment Project outlined a number of issues which the project encountered
before during and after the hotel redevelopment project there included
Page | 37
Before the redevelopment process
Managing change while also trying to mitigate violence the unauthorised
occupation of tenants wanting to gain the benefits of the redevelopment project
and the allocation of units (as a contentious challenge) were cited as challenges
encountered before the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
During the process
Challenges around the design of the units (limitations and constraints with respect to
skills time and finances) the issue of labour the provision of public and social
facilities services (ie cregraveches play areas for the children) were cited as being
encountered during the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
Issues after the project
Tariff rates (with electricity as one of the biggest concerns) along with the
disagreement and discontentment around rental payments were cited as the
challenges which were encountered post the hostel redevelopment process A
central question and concern that arose focused on whether the hostel did not just
became a renovated workersrsquo hostel or if it actually did change into actual family
units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
With the study area for this research in mind I am left wondering if the issues identified
by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) are unique to the City Deep contextproject
or are they to some extent representative and reverberate to the broader
challenges and limitations of hostel conversion projects across the country Certainly
there is some value to participation when it comes to hostel conversion
redevelopment but the process of participation particularly within the context of
hostels as politically and socio-economically volatile environments will most likely be
confronted by sturdy issues of inherent sensitivities and nuances (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010) This is what Mdunyelwa (2015) decisively refers to as binary cultural
political and social structures alluding to the sentiment that some hostel dwellers are
in some respect men and women of two minds set free from the physical shackles of
oppression yet still sadly unable and ill-equipped to live and transform their thinking
well beyond that (Mdunyelwa 2015)
Page | 38
23 Conclusion
Typically the body of work that exists on hostels is unambiguously and largely
concentrated on the historically-laden context of hostels It especially articulates
issues of violent conflict and tension within hostels and their surrounding areas
Conflict situations are often captioned as hostel versus township lsquowarsrsquo There is an
important political backdrop to this which relates to the rural urban links made
mention of in this chapter
Furthermore the poor living conditions of hostels the inadequate provision of services
and social amenities should be considered The loss of family life and the sense that
hostels pose as limited spaces which is a negative reflection on to dignity of its
inhabitants are some of elements associated with the stigma of hostel life (Bonner
and Nieftagodien 2012 Ramphele 1993) This has to quite a significant extent
remained a present-day and associated reality of the hostel setting and has posed
vast challenges to hostel conversion redevelopment projects
This chapter has argued that the landscape of hostels has by and large remained
complex at times perplexing and highly contentious As a resultant the wicked
consequences of the hostel system have been many and varied but all of which
warrant due attention The theoretical backdrop on hostels has been useful in
developing themes that resonate with the case study Sethokga hostel Of particular
relevance to the case study will be role and significance of community public
participation in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Highlighting some of the
issues encountered before and during the project as the project has not yet been
completed Certain aspects of the discussion on key concepts theories arguments
and ideas and how they resonate with the case study will be explored further
Particularly the notion of bedhold the aspect of men and housing the stigma of
hostel life and the resultant consequences of the hostel system will be critically
discussed in chapter five which examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project
Page | 39
Introducing Sethokga hostel
3 Introduction
In addition to the study area this chapter will in greater detail describe and locate
Sethokga hostel It examines its local as well as municipal context and presents a
visual narrative of the hostel The aim of the visual narrative is to provide the reader
with a lsquosensersquo of the physical setting of the hostel thus to provide the reader with a
visual depiction of the multifaceted circumstance of the hostel and the complex
challenges in which its residents endure Chapter three largely seeks to provide the
reader with an impression of the context in which the Sethokga hostel conversion
project is taking place
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)
In the period between 1890 and the late 1920s Ekurhuleni (at the time referred to as
the East Rand region of the Transvaal Province) experienced increased numbers of
black male workersmigrants This was as a result of a surge in the gold mining sector
which took place on the Witwatersrand gold reefs (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
According to Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) of the 15 000 workers that were
employed in the sector some 5 000 worked in what is now called the Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality With time the number of workers in the Ekurhuleni area
continued to rise considerably most of who were oscillating migrants who were either
accommodated in labour compounds such as hostels or shanty settlements in
townships across Ekurhuleni such as Tembisa Duduza Tsakane Kwa-Thema and so
forth (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) also argue that for most of the period of the
booming mining sector in the Witwatersrand reef to well into the countryrsquos
democratic dispensation political contention in hostels had long been a common
feature throughout the region As a consequence hostels and a number of the
townships in Ekurhuleni have somewhat continued to exist within a circumstance of
deep-seated antagonistic political and socio-economic conditions (Bonner and
Nieftagodien 2012)
Sethokga hostel is one of the largest hostels in the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan region
according to the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis Study in 2014 there
Page | 40
were approximately 12 120 residents living in the hostel (Demacon 2014) Of that
roughly 4 000 have since the beginning of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
been relocated or reallocated within other blocks in the hostel to make way for the
construction of the family units (Demacon 2014) Some of the relocations of residents
have been to alternative sites outside the hostel to either Enhlanzeni hostel or
Vusimuzi hostel both situated in the Tembisa area (Demacon 2014)Interestingly
Enhlanzeni as well as Vusimizi hostels are also experiencing issues of overcrowding
poor living conditions and similar socio-economic conditions to Sethokga Moreover
neither Enhlanzeni nor Vusimuzi hostel have or are undergoing upgrading
conversion It was not clear in the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis
Study what the reasons for relocating the residents of Sethokga to these hostels were
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni hostel and
Vusimuzi hostel
Source Demacon 2014
Page | 41
311 Geographic description of the study
Sethokga hostel was built in 1980 and much like other hostels across the country the
Sethokga hostel was badly designed poorly built and has been suffering years of
neglect Sethokga hostel is a public sector type hostel and is owned by the
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Sethokga was built to accommodate male
migrant labourers from a range of industries (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Similar to
numerous other hostels men could live in the hostel so long as they had work in
industries but wives partners and families were prohibited from residence (Thurman
1997) They were entitled only to short-term visiting permits Regular and violent raids
which were carried out by authorities during the day and at night would rigorously
enforce these regulations to chase away arrest or bus back the wives partners and
families of the men back to the homelands (Thurman 1997)
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi initially the hostel
accommodated a lsquomixturersquo of residents black men across all tribes and ethnicities
but he recalls the change that occurred in the 1990s in response to political shifts He
recalls that ldquoafter the release of Mandela and when they started preaching lsquothis
thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions happened according to who was Zulu or
Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Below the ward
councillor explains what he saw as some of the factors that led to what is currently
the strong predominance of Pedi and Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel
suggesting that ldquoThere were mixed feeling when talks were rife concerning
negotiations that could lead to possible elections because the IFP (Inkatha Freedom
Party) was rejecting such a notion At the time it was a situation of the Zulursquos terrorizing
the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa and standing with the white man The
Zulursquos did not like such an idea which caused a divide among the Zulu and Xhosa
This led to conflict between the Xhosa and the Zulu There was fighting everywhere in
the country and you found some Pedis Venda and Tsongarsquos ran away from certain
hostels because they were being chased out and some landed up in Sethokga (
Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) The points made by Cllr Mohlapamaswi flag some
interesting points for instance that this hostel in some respect played the role of a
place of refuge and might affect how residents view it
Sethokga hostel is situated on approximately 22 hectares of land and consists of 29 U-
shaped single and two storey dormitories but mainly consists of the two storey walk-up
dormitories (Demacon 2014) The hostel lies on medium dolomitic soil despite this it
has been said and reported that over the years this has not had a significant impact
Page | 42
on much of the structural qualities of the hostel (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) The
structural sturdiness of the hostel is said to have been mitigated through precautions
such as drainage and the assembly of lsquowellrsquo positioned pavements (Demacon 2014)
According to the ward councillor there are a few women and children living in the
hostel although it is not quite clear how many They are however not recognised as
lsquolegitimatersquo residence of Sethokga (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Arguably a
number of the hostel redevelopment conversion projects that have taken place
across the country have been as a response to the prevailing presence of women
and children who had come to live in the hostel The fact that this hostel has
remained predominantly male occupied presents a number contextual dimensions
to the hostel conversion project This will be explored in chapter five which will
examine the conceptualisation of the hostel conversion project
According to Thurman (1997) it is not uncommon in hostels for up to three families to
live in one room measuring 20 square metres Such rooms were designed to
accommodate two to three workers or even up to twenty people to share a sink a
shower and toilet (Thurman 1997) Yet lsquowholersquo families ie husbands wives children
or extended families have not moved into Sethokga Overcrowding remains a
concern and privacy is scarce in the hostel (Demacon 2014) The dormitories have
very limited physical space and little room for manoeuvre The typical floor plan of a
hostel is provided on the next page and depicts the rigid rudimentary and restrained
design of the hostel compound Sethokga hostel has identical floor plans and
elevations
Page | 43
Floor plan of a typical dormitory compound
Source Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
Figure 1 Ground Floor Plan
Figure 2 First Floor Plan
Figure 3 Elevation
Page | 44
312 Locality
The hostel is situated in the East Rand region of the Gauteng province within the
municipal administrative jurisdiction of the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (EMM)
in the Kempton Park ndash Tembisa Customer Care Area It is located in the north-eastern
region region B of the EMM in the township of Tembisa and lies to the south of the
Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and to the east of the City of Johannesburg
Moreover the hostel is lies between the Kempton Park Pretoria railway link near
Oakmoor station thus a multipurpose and inter-as well as intra-regional public
transport node It is well serviced in terms of public transport and easily accessible
from the R21 (Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
Map 2 Locality map
Source Google maps 2015
Source EkurhuleniGIS 2015
Page | 45
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex
313 Local and municipal context
Tembisa is one of the largest townships in the metro and it is situated in region A of the
EMM towards the north-western end of the municipality The hostel lies in ward four of
the metro to the east of Midrand and to the west of one of the most affluent suburbs
in region A Glen Marais along with other high income areas such as Serengeti Golf
Estate Midstream and the suburb of Edenvale (Demacon 2014)
The Integrated Development Plan (IDP) for the Oakmoor area Area 19 of the metrorsquos
Local Integrated Development Plan (LIDP) was last prepared in 2000 The report
contained among its leading aims to establish an integrated framework to guide and
facilitate development interventions in the area (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000) It was documented in the report that the SDP would guide the
Page | 46
municipalityrsquos decisions in the development and management of the area in a way
that the report articulates as follows by encouraging and setting the framework for
private sector investment and initiatives and by seeking to strengthen economic
activity in the area through the identification of specific projects and programmes
which would kick-start development and lastly working towards improving service
delivery (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) The report reviews the
historically context of the area and argues that basically no provision was made for
service delivery or the adequate management of land and no consideration of land
use imperatives was given This was the case throughout the Tembisa Township (SJN
Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Furthermore the report established that the general land-use pattern across most of
the township was mainly comprised of residential developments It was in this 2000
Integrated Development Plan that it was overtly and in retrospect alluded to that
Tembisa had been established to function at that time as a dormitory settlement for
the neighbouring economic centres of the East Rand region such as Kempton Park
Olifantsfontein and Midrand (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
An abstract in 2000 SDF report(SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000 stated
the following that investigations had confirmed that the Sethokga hostel buildings
were structurally sound except for some weather proofing of external walls and basic
finishes to walls floors and ceiling Some repair work to cracks and precautions to pre-
empt future cracking may be necessary but the hostel blocks would offer little
difficulty in terms of conversion into single and family units According to the report
there seemed to be more problems with engineering services For example the
internal sewer reticulation was said to be so dilapidated that it may have needed to
be replaced entirely Parts of the water supply network would need to be replaced
fire hydrants installed electricity supply upgraded and grading of roads and storm-
water disposal required substantial attention (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
When the completed report was presented in 2000 it set out a case that the
municipality was currently negotiating with a non-profit organisation to acquire hostel
land and convert the hostel buildings into single and family units and manage such
housing stock (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) It further documented
that the lsquoultimatersquo number of dwelling units would be about 1200 with the first phase
of development to deliver 500 units The report suggested that the development
would be undertaken by an external organisation and that few planning guidelines
Page | 47
would need to be proposed to harmonize Sethokga hostel residential complex with
the rest of the Tembisa Township In the report it is assumed that the hostel conversion
would should result in a lsquosecurity complexrsquo type of housing development and
access to the complex would be gained mainly from local distributors such as the
extension of MbizaIzimbongi Street and Nyarhi Street (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000)
The report argued for change in the household profile of the hostel and this would
result in an increased demand for additional social facilities such as schools cregraveches
churches libraries play area(s) etc It was found in the report that space intensive (in
terms of size) social facilities eg cregraveches and a multipurpose centre should be
encouraged within the complex (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Additionally limited retail specifically corner shops should be established within the
complex Lastly the report suggested that it was important to align the services in the
area with the rest of the EMM and ensure adequate capacity at points where the
services connected into the hostel Roads in particular were highlighted as important
in this regard to ensure continuity and appropriate distribution of traffic movement
What is more the report states that traffic should be discouraged within the new
settlement (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
The SDF marked the entire Sethokga hostel complex as lsquohostel upgradingrsquo married to
public open space within the vicinity of the complex churches sports fields and
mixed use areas were proposed in the SDF (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
Page | 48
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework (SDF) 2000
The development proposals in the 2000 Oakmoor area19 SDF proposed that Sethokga hostel be
Redeveloped into family units The SDF also proposed mixed use nodal developments within and around
the Oakmoor area and proposed additional facilities such as cregraveches schools and recreational
facilities in certain areas
Source SJN Development Planning Consultants Planning Area 19 Oakmoor Development
Plan Development Proposals Final Report 2000
This SDF for the area is quite old and has not been updated
since this 2000 plan
Sethokga
hostel
Page | 49
There are 22 hostels across Ekurhuleni which are spread across six regions in the metro
(Demacon 2014) Region A has two hostels of which one is government owned
region B has three hostels of which government owns two regions C D and E hosts
one hostel respectively while region F has sixteen hostels (it is not clear how many are
owned by government) (Demacon 2014)
In terms of social facilities and amenities the study area is situated within a 3km radius
from two schools Rabasotho Combined School and Philena Middle School It is also
within a 2km radius from a healthcare facility - Esselen Park Satellite Clinic - and within
a 1km radius from a sporting facility - Esselen Park Sports School of Excellence
(Demacon 2014) The nearest police station is roughly 6km away and a lsquogenerousrsquo
number of shopping as well as entertainment centres are found within a 15 to 20km
radius of the hostel The nearest taxi route is less than 100m with the nearest train
stations including the Tembisa Limindlela and Kaalfontein stations all falling within a
10km radius (Demacon 2014)
In 2013 the Tembisa economy contributed 83 to the overall economy of the EMM
whilst Ekurhuleni contributed 253 to the overall economy of the Gauteng province
in 2013 (Demacon 2014) Sethokga hostel forms part of the Kempton Park Tembisa
precinct and according the Sethokga Hostels Mixed Typology Market Analysis Report
it falls within the development context of the Kempton Park Tembisa precinct It hosts
a range of housing typologies supported under various housing programmes
(Demacon 2014) which include but are not limited to Informal Settlement Upgrading
programmes and projects Integrated Residential Development Programmes(s) and
Gap Market Housing Units According to this report there also exists several
opportunities for the development of medium to higher density residential
developments (Demacon 2014) The EMMs 2010 Metropolitan Spatial Development
Framework suggests that among the several intentions of the metro the EMM will seek
to expand the affordable housing market and that it will seek to accommodate a
wider range of the metrorsquos populace by making a range of housing options available
for people across different income groupings (Demacon 2014)
This next section exhibits the lsquoambiencersquo of Sethokga hostel as it currently stands It
delves into some detail regarding the current setting of the hostel and takes the
reader through the authorrsquos experience being in the hostel and lsquotravellingrsquo through its
narrow corridors It shares my experience of going into this dauntingly male
dominated environment riddled with metaphorical tones of disempowerment
despondency and neglect All the images displayed here were taken by the author
Page | 50
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel
In terms of its infrastructure the hostel is said to still be somewhat structurally sound
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005) Aesthetically however it appears quite old and rundown
and leaves a lot to be desired The neglected state of refuse and rubble removal
adds to the wear and tear appearance of the hostel Each of the blocks that make-
up the hostel consists of separate dormitories and entry into each dormitory is gained
through a common access point - a door - that leads into a communal area with a
basic cooking and dining area There are no ceilings in any of the dormitories The
paint-work both inside and outside has long worn out In general the hostel appears
especially dull and unsightly
321 Built form architecture
Figure 4
The hostel is old and run-down
The adjoining hostel blocks are lined with a
number of lsquoinformalrsquo traders
This area that leads into one of the hostel
blocks is where a resident displays his goods
for selling
Page | 51
A number of the men have cars which they
park in their respective blocks
Walk-up that leads into one of the dorms
that is later photographed and shows the
condition of the interior of the hostel
The hostel is in an obvious state of neglect
and refuse removal is ignored
I spotted a number of chickens roaming about
in the hostel and a small vegetable garden
near one of the entrances into a dorm
There is one entry and exit point into most of
the blocks in the hostel
Page | 52
Figure 5
This is a communal cooking area It was said
that because the stove is so old and has a
number of issues the electricity powering the
stove is never turned off and so it runs
constantly through the day and night time
The area next to the cooking area is where
groceries and other goods are stored for
safe-keeping
This communal dining area also leads into
the rest of the dorm and the place where the
hostel dwellers sleep
None of the dorms have ceilings or any
added furnishings (ie lighting) The hostel
has never been re-painted or renovated
since it was built in the early 1980s
Page | 53
This corridor leads into the bedrooms where
the men sleep Sheets andor curtains lead to
what felt like very restricted distressing and
unpleasent living quarters
The compartments offer very limited room to
move around and offer little privacy There
are two beds per compartment with up to
three people sharing a bed The living
conditions are as what Ramphele (1993)
described as constraining to varying degrees
since it is a physically restricted environment
with blurred boundaries of personal private
space The physical proximity to others offers
practically no prospect for privacy or liberty
to accommodate visitors
Page | 54
Figure 6
322 Municipal amenities
Male urinal
Communal toilet
Communal shower
Most of the hostel blocks in the hostel have
electricity yet it seems to be offered for
free
The entrance (door) leading to the one
communal shower and toilet facility There is
one bathroom per dorm
Page | 55
Figure 7
323 The adjoining area
Most of the blocks in the hostels have
communal indoor as well as outdoor taps
with running water provided without
charge
lsquoInformalrsquo activity trade takes place in
and around the hostel
The council offices are situated adjacent to
one of the hostel blocks across the street
The municipality does not collect refuse in
the hostel so it is up to the hostel residents to
dispose of their refuse (it was not clear why
the municipality did not collect refuse in the
hostel)
Page | 56
According to the (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) entry and access to the hostel are
determined by ones ability to negotiate for a bed Much like what was described by
Ramphele (1993) the closest likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo in hostels was in the form
of a bed this persists at Sethokga To some extent every aspect of life and survival in
Sethokga revolves around a bed
One gains entry into Sethokga through a block chairperson (Sololo interview 2015)
Some of the functions and responsibilities of these block chairpersonrsquos is to know what
is happening in that particular hostel block The illustration given by the economic
representative for the ward Mr Sololo was that
ldquoWhatever which has been happening in a particular block the chairperson
should be aware of it and should call a meeting Letrsquos say if you are sitting in a
block here and you have got a jukebox and you find that you are selling
liquor and now they tell you that by 10 orsquoclock you close down and the music
should be off Then you do not comply with that the block chairperson will
report you to the hostel committee and they will sit and come up with a fine
for you if you do not listen even after they fine you they will chase you out of
the hostelrdquo
According to Sololo interview (2015) the block chairpersons maintain peace and
order and need to ensure that any conflict is mediated They are elected by the
residents of a given block and are entrusted with their grievances Ideally they should
be first point of contact before anything is to be escalated to the ward councillor ie
if a pipe bursts and they are without water This would need to be reported to the
EMM by either the block chairperson and if the problem remains unresolved it is then
escalated to the ward councillor (Sololo interview 2015)
33 Conclusion
Chapter three has explored a number of elements which model the status quo of the
study field Ironically the conditions in the hostel are not much different to many of
the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg Sethokga hostel also resembles
many other hostels across the country The hostel is overcrowded there is little room
to manoeuvre and there is an obvious lack of privacy The hostel is a possible health
hazard to those who live in it
Page | 57
This chapter shared some of my own experience of the hostel My experience consisted out
of being in the hostel taking photographs in and around the hostel and engaging with the
living environment Inside the hostel I was engulfed by its narrow poorly lit and what felt like
stifling corridors Corridors divided by curtains and sheets led into what were very confined
sleeping compartments Beds offer a place of rest for those who have voluntarily or
involuntarily sought refuge in the hostel Many after all consider the hostels as a lsquobetterrsquo
alternative to homelessness The experience for me was unlike any I have ever felt since the
circumstance of my life has provided a certain comfort that was surely challenged in the
modest time that I spent at Sethokga Chapter four examines what has been the states
approach to hostel conversion
Page | 58
The statesrsquo approach to hostel conversion
4 Introduction
The discussion in this chapter will reflect and review South African state policy post-1994
that concerns hostels Chapter four will also critically discuss and describe the
fundamentals of what have been considered two of the leading approaches to hostel
redevelopment conversion namely the Hostel Redevelopment Programmes (HRP) and
the Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach
There have been a number of state interventions post-1994 that have seemingly been a
lsquosignrsquo of governments lsquodesirersquo to improve the living conditions of not just hostel residents
but of a vast majority of South Africanrsquos who were subjected to poor living conditions
(Thurman 1997) However for the purpose of this study there will be particular focus on
interventions around hostels In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005) concur with a few
other authors that during post democracy the South African government introduced
along with other housing programmes a hostel upgrading conversion programme
aimed primarily at converting hostels into integrated family-oriented developments
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
South Africarsquos housing policy was launched in 1994 and the housing subsidy scheme
promised to deliver one million houses in five years (UrbanLankMark 2011) This would be
delivered through a range of subsidy mechanisms (UrbanLankMark 2011) According to
Dyiki interview(2015) in 1995 or about 1996 a National Hostel Redevelopment Policy was
approved and was among one of the primary national housing programmes (Dyiki
interview 2015) To facilitate nation-building and effective state formation it was believed
that social programmes such as state funded housing programmes would play a pivotal
role in this regard (Netshitenzhe 2011) Moreover the nation-building agenda saw the
government set the country bold and far-reaching goals and these somewhat became
associated with certain policies ideologies and norms (Netshitenzhe 2011) However
redundant budgetary rituals inadequate feasibility studies weak project evaluation
bureaucratic inefficiency managing community expectations and political interference
have been some of the issues that have held back progress (von Holdt 2010 and
Pienaar 2010) As a result housing provided by government has often been poorly
Page | 59
located and in some respect it has continued to perpetuate a reality of spatial
segregation (Charlton et al 2014)
This next section will describe how the hostel conversion approach has been articulated
through state policy through subsequent grants and schemes
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach
Through the provision of grants and schemes government has made efforts to provide
funding for the redevelopment conversion of hostels However there has been
somewhat of a bias on public sector hostels as the grants are provided mainly for the
redevelopment conversion of hostels owned by municipalities or provincial government
(Department of Human Settlements 2015) In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
provide a synopsis of some of governmentsrsquo earliest approaches to addressing lsquothe hostel
issuersquo (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) This is summarised as follows
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Peoples Housing Process
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme (this will be discussed in
section 42)
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Arguably the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units
Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of state efforts to grapple with the vast
challenges around hostels hostel life and the social ills that have become endemic to
hostels (Dyiki 2006) The essence of the approaches listed below was that hostels would
be redeveloped converted to create sustainable human living conditions To re-
integrated these hostel communities into the surrounding township communities (Pienaar
and Cloete 2005)
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership was premised on
the notion that Developers this could also include the municipality would be able to
submit project proposals for the development of housing on stands that were serviced for
people who qualified in terms of eligibility criteria eg a combined household income of
Page | 60
the beneficiary versus the available subsidy amount provided by the state Households
would then be required to contribute to the development (that is the construction of their
house) from their own savings or through what was referred to as lsquosweet equityrsquo
(providing their own material and labour) Locational and geographic factors would also
affect the amount of the subsidy by 2005 Pienaar and Cloete (2005) noted that this
subsidy had delivered an approximate 13 million homes which were primarily low-cost
free-standing
In the case of hostels redevelopment one option was that the subsidy could be used to
build new free-standing dwellings for individual full title ownership on unused portions of
land within hostel complexes This option would require sub-division of the land as well as
the installation of additional service Under the provisions of the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme another option would be to convert existing dormitories into family
apartments that could be sold off to beneficiaries under sectional title This sectional title
is a form of ownership where an individual holds title to a dwelling unit it can be a free-
standing unit or part of a multi-unit storey building The individual owns title together
with all the other owners of sectional dwellings on that property an undivided share of the
land on which the dwellings are built (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) However the challenge
was that where existing dormitories were converted and sold under title the projects
would be exposed to a host of problems that sectional title properties generally
encountered in low-income areas in the private sector ie poor management and
maintenance and difficulties in collecting levies and service debts (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process
The Peoplersquos Housing Process was reportedly introduced to enable communities
particularly those in disadvantaged areas to participate in the provision of their own
housing without the participation interference or involvement of private developers
However technical and administrative support and consultation would be offered by
Housing Support Organisations which were approved to serve this function (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005) What were termed as facilitation grants would be made available by the
government to lsquokick-startrsquo the housing projects The beneficiaries could apply for a grant
to pay for the services rendered by the Housing Support Organisation(s) and the housing
subsidy would be the same as for what was contained in the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) hostel residents could as a
community collective make use of this avenue as a means of obtaining ownership of an
improved residence with the assistance of their local authority a non-governmental
Page | 61
organisation (NGO) or perhaps a cluster of professions who could provide support and
administrative assistance as their Housing Support Organisation (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing was introduced in 1995 and was essentially a
variant of the project-linked subsidy provided to non-profit institutions independent of
government and registered as legally approved entities Households earning less than
R3500 per month would be provided through this subsidy with subsidised rental housing
by these entities In 1995 when the subsidy was introduced it carried a once-off capital
grant of R16 000 per dwelling but by 2002 the amount had increased to R27 000 as part of
the governmentrsquos aspiration to promote medium density housing Pienaar and Cloete
(2005) note that because the hostel redevelopment programme had been in limbo for
several years at the time of their study the Institutional Subsidy approach had been
considered as a viable alternative to accelerate hostel conversion projects The tenure
options under this subsidy it was proposed would include
Rental
Co-operative ownership
An instalment sale option in the form of a lsquorent to buyrsquo practice with a
minimum rental period of four years to qualify for the conversion to ownership
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Under the National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
the National Housing Code (for subsidised housing) delineates subsidised housing as
Permanent residential structures that have security of tenure both internal
and external privacy
Housing that has portable water serviced with adequate energy and sanitary
facilities
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing were set
to give effect to the objectives of the Housing Act 1997 which came into effect on 1 April
Page | 62
1998 To ensure quality and durable housing products that complied with particular
minimum standards (National Housing Report 2009) For instance dwellings had to have
a minimum gross floor area of 30m2 but this has since been amended (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005)
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country
Some international interest has been generated to consider intervention in hostels and
efforts to redevelopingconverting hostels The point of this section is to illustrate that
hostels occupied and in some respect have continued to occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are one of many representations of
the physical manifestation of three centuries of systematic racial discrimination and
economic exploitation (Thurman 1997) The consolidation of the migrant labour system
through hostels the poor living conditions of hostels the dishonour of hostel life and the
control they exert on the African populace Saw hostels gaining the attention of a
number of international agencies and authorities who put resources towards and took an
interest in reconfiguring the disposition of hostels (Dyiki interview 2015)
In the period between August 2002 and April 2003 the USAID (United States Agency for
International Development) extended its support to community based approaches to
housing in South Africa and in turn created a platform where it would have input(s) into
South Africarsquos national housing policy (Urban Sector Network 2003)
Hostel redevelopment was supported under a grant provision provided by the USAID this
had two main objectives The first was that policy and information dissemination should
serve as key objectives and secondly that USAID would have a voice in the facilitation of
hostel redevelopments Initially the grant was meant to run from 23 August 2000 to 30
August 2002 but an extension was requested and the grant extended for the period 1
September 2002 to 30 April 2003 (Urban Sector Network 2003) Additionally the on-goings
of the programme instituted under the grant were to include the following activities
Identifying and conducting research into tenure options and feasible
management models for hostels
Identifying possible needs and challenges and to then conduct nation-wide
research in the hostel sector
Facilitating workshops and consolidating policy submissions and to submit
research papers to the Department of Housing
Page | 63
To publish research papers
To conduct mid-term and final evaluation of the programme
Conducting information outreaches where the USN (Urban Sector Network) would
play an essential role in informing government the private sector as well as
communities about the opportunities which could be created through the
redevelopment of hostels (Urban Sector Network2003)
The Urban Sector Network (USN) then proceeded to make specific recommendations on
the hostel redevelopment approach The USN called for the broadening on the scope of
the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme to include all hostels (private and
grey sector) and not just public sector hostel Recommendations were made that the
norms and standards for the redeveloped hostels should be developed along with
national guidelines for the management of redeveloped hostels by local authorities They
advocated for stronger support for co-operative housing The redevelopment of hostels
to be approached in an integrated and holistic manner and hostels should not be
redeveloped in an isolated manner The subsidy amount for hostels redevelopment and
social facilitation needed to be increased Lastly that hostels redevelopment should
support livelihood strategies and capacity building and training of hostel residents during
the redevelopment process was essential (Urban Sector Network 2003)
The USN proposed a departure from the public sector hostel redevelopment bias of the
Hostel Redevelopment plan (Urban Sector Network 2003)
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme (HRP)
In principal the Hostel Redevelopment Programme supported an unambiguous bias in
favour of public sector hostels (Dyiki 2006) Public sector hostels are those hostels
owned by either provincial or local authorities that offered accommodation to workers
from a range of industries (Thurman 1997) Grey sector hostels (in which the structures
wereare owned by private companies but the land by a provincial or local authority
and private sector hostels) did not form part of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme
(Dyiki 2006) The biggest limitation and challenge of the HRP was in its narrow focus on
solely the conversion of hostels beds (Thurman 1997) The aim of the HRP was to provide
a subsidy allocation that was based per bed but it was criticised as being impractical
and unfeasible and not adequately addressing the issue of housing provision (Dyiki
2006) Dyiki interview (2015) believes that the challenge of the HRP was that it was not
talking to individuals but rather it was a subsidy given to the state to improve the hostel
and the standard of living in the hostel Since most of the public sector hostels were
Page | 64
managed by the municipalities the municipalities received the subsidy and the
residents of the hostels therefore had very little say in how the subsidy could in effect be
used The other challenge was that grey sector and public sector hostels were not part
of the subsidy (Dyiki interview 2015)
The Hostel Redevelopment Programme was perhaps the earliest strategy conceived by
the South African government as a national policy aiming to
Promote habitable and humane conditions in hostel conversions
Ensure the involvement of hostel residents the surroundingneighbouring
community and relevant (publicprivate) authorities and any other entity
affected by the project are involved in the decision-making processes
Facilitate and promote social integration within hostel communities and the
hostels and adjacent communities
Put measures in place to accommodate any persons displaced by the hostel
conversion project
Empower promote economic development and seeks to be development-
oriented
According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment
Programme was largely based on the premise that this programme would make some
provisions for grant funding from the central government towards the conversion or
upgrading of hostels particularly public sector or grey-sector hostels This will be done with
the broad aim of the programme to facilitate and create living conditions for residents
that are humane and hygienic by providing prospects for housing options that are
affordable and sustainable With tenure options for
Rental
Possible ownership for those at the lower income scale
Upon its conception a capital subsidy of R16 000 was initially proposed per family or R4
000 per individual Additionally to be eligible for this programme hostel redevelopment
programmes would need to be
Planned and implemented in a participative and comprehensive manner
with the requirement that interest groups would need to be established
Based on socio-economic studies undertaken to determine and consider the
needs and affordability aspect of those who would be affected (ie stand to
benefit from the project)
Page | 65
Unfailing in ensuring that there is no displacement of residents unless
alternative accommodation is provided
Sustainable with regards to the on-going payments of maintenance and any
other related costs
Purposeful to augment employment opportunities for the hostel residents as
well as the locals in the construction and on-going maintenance of the
project
The broad aim of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme (Mdunyelwa 2015) was to
convert these historically male-occupied spaces which were also subsequently meant
for migrant labourers to family units But it will be done in such a way to able and
capacitate the accommodation of the families of these men In some way but perhaps
not explicitly stated in the Hostel Redevelopment Programme policy brief there is an
element of urbanisation that is implied Therefore it was an attempt to somewhat
encourage the men to relocate their families from their rural home-base (Mdunyelwa
2015)
The shortcomings of the HRP in how it had a restricted focus on hostel beds and
somewhat of an oversight on the complexity of the configuration of hostels saw it being
replaced by the Community Residential Units Programme (CRU) (Pienaar 2010) Dyiki
interview (2015) in my interview with him argued that the CRU Programme unlike the HRP
contains a lot more detail that was perhaps missed in the HRP He further suggested that
the CRU Programme could be considered somewhat of a lsquocost recoveryrsquo strategy by
government to recoup some of the monies spent on these projects As the CRU
programme has a strong rental housing stock component to it (Dyiki interview 2015)
44 The Community Residential Units Programme (CRU Programme)
The Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme has since replaced the National
Hostel Redevelopment Programme At the time of this study there are approximately
2000 public hostels across the country with a vast majority of them still needing to be
afforded some attention and measures to redevelop them (Demacon 2014) According
to the Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the CRU Programme (2006)
the CRU Programme aims to facilitate the provision of secure and stable rental tenure for
lower income persons Furthermore stating that the programme seeks to provide a
framework for addressing the many and varied forms of existing public sector residential
accommodation as the previous approach under the HRP only considered a ldquoper-bedrdquo
Page | 66
approach that proved unfavourable on a number of occasions (CRU Programme Policy
Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme is believed to provide a lsquobetterrsquo suited programme and a coherent
framework to assist in dealing with a vast range of public stock which has for the most
part been indecisively and incomprehensively dealt with (Demacon 2014) The CRU
Programme targets low income individuals as well as households with an average R 3500
monthly income and who have not been able to find suitable accommodation
According to the CRU Programme in the years leading up to 2006 there was an
approximate 4512 of households nationally which fall within the R0-R800 income groups
currently renting and an approximate 4027 falling within the R801 ndash R3200 income
groups (CRU Programme Policy Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme intends to cover the following areas
a) Public hostels that are owned by Provincial Housing Departments and municipalities
b) ldquoGreyrdquo hostels which are hostel that have both a public and private ownership
component due to historical reasons
c) Public housing stock that forms part of the ldquoEnhanced Extended Discount Benefit
Schemerdquo but which cannot be transferred to individual ownership and has to be
managed as rental accommodation by the public owner
d) Post-1994 newly developed public residential accommodation owned by provincial
housing departments and municipalities
e) Existing dysfunctional abandoned andor distressed buildings in inner city or township
areas that have been taken over by a municipality and funded by housing funds
(Department of Human Settlements 2015)
The CRU programme policy document is quite a laborious document In general the CRU
programme seeks to promote and advance the provision of rental options for lower
income groups facilitate communication and participation of residents throughout the
process provide a variety of rental stock and provide secure and stable rental stock This
will be done by what the CRU Programme articulates as providing a realistic funding
programme (Department of Human Settlements 2015)
According to the CRU programme rental stock provided by the programme is to be
owned by either a provincial housing department or a municipality However this has
been a seriously contested position on the part of the individuals and households
affected by the programme who want home ownership (Dyiki interview 2015)
Page | 67
45 Conclusion
There have been a number of projects over the past several years which have in part
articulated the states aspiration to reconfigure the lsquoway of lifersquo in hostels The Hostel
Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units Programme are
considered to have been the leading approaches to reconfiguring hostels within the
countryrsquos broader landscape Whether hostels have or do not have a place in
democratic South Africa is part of what this study is looking to explore
Chapter five introduces the Sethokga hostel conversion project and in principal seeks to
unpack the conceptualisation of the project while reflecting on the findings of the
interviews
Page | 68
The Sethokga hostel conversion project
5 Introduction
Chapter five will examine the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seek to unpack
how the project has been conceptualised Discussing the main components of the
project its main stakeholders the project phases exploring what are its defining
characteristics the broad vision and aim of the project how the project has understood
the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn set to address them and then also
in what way(s) the residents of the hostel have been involved in the project Furthermore
this chapter will examine what the project considers important in terms of gender issues
what have been some limitations of the project while it also considers what the
anticipated impact and benefit of the project is
Lastly and in view of the interviews that were conducted chapter five discusses how the
residents of the hostel and the community of Tembisa and greater Ekurhuleni will know
that the project has been completed and has been successful By and large this chapter
offers testament of the findings from the field work and reviews the rationale of the
Sethokga conversion project To conclude this chapter a collage of diagrams and
images will be presented to provide the reader with greater insight(s) into the Sethokga
hostel conversion project
51 Outline of the main components of the project
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project
There have been a number of stakeholders involved in the Sethokga hostel conversion
project the main stakeholders include
o The Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement (GPDHS)
o LTE Consulting
o The Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
o The ward councillor and various community committees and leaders
o The Sethokga Hostel residents
o The community of Tembisa
Page | 69
The roles of the stakeholders are summarised as follows National government is the key
funder of the Sethokga hostel conversion project the funds are transferred to the GPDHS
who have to then ensure that the costs of the project are managed LTE Consulting is a
consulting company appointed by the GPDHS for the oversight and construction of the
Sethokga hostel conversion project They work in collaboration with the EMM (the local
authority) and its various departments such as the services department the energy
department quality assurance etc However the GPDHS remains the lsquomain decision-
makerrsquo and lsquocustodianrsquo of the project with the lead oversight on the budget and
programmeproject management The project manager Mr Sisa Majikijela is the official
from the GPDHS that is directly responsible for supervision and coordination of the
project The ward councillor and the various community committees leaders facilitate
avenues of communication and engagement between the officials (from province the
EMM and LTE) with the residents of Sethokga and community lsquoAs the eyes and ears on
the groundrsquo (Majikijela interview 2015) ideally the ward councillor and various
community committees leaders have an important role to play in ensuring that the
Sethokga residents and community will be the rightful recipients of the project The
Sethokga hostel residents and broader community have a vested interest in the project
because it stands to affect andor benefit them (Sololo interview2015)
Once the project is completed with the family units fully constructed (ie with furnishings
such as trees plants parking bays and so forth) and the services installed The project will
be handed over to the EMM for on-going administration maintenance and the
collection of rentals (Shibambo interview 2015) The Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlement in collaboration with the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and LTE
Consulting play a key role as facilitates of the conversion of Sethokga hostel into family
units (Majikijela interview 2015)
522 Project phases
The data regarding the project phases was easily accessible and generously provided by
the consulting resident engineer and the architect providing me with a market analysis
study and a few other key documents The development concept of the hostel
conversion project divides the project into three phases and further subdivides each of
the phases into two phases phases A and B (Demacon 2014)
Initial studies (ie pre-feasibility studies) were done in 2008 but the demolition of the first
four blocks of the hostel demolished for the current phase 1A only took place in August of
2011 and it was anticipated that phase 1A would be completed and handed over to the
Page | 70
municipality by the end of 2014 but this did not happen (Majikijela interview 2015) At the
time of conducting fieldwork between the months of August and September 2015 it was
said that phase 1A was near completion with just the landscaping parking and water
provision left to completed (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
Phase 1A of the project was meant to bring to completion a total of 240 units
accommodating 1 194 people to provide 69 parking bays (one per four units) a total of
54 one bedroom units 117 two bedroom units and 69 three bedroom units at an average
unit size of 324m2 477m2 and 588m2 for the one two and three bedrooms respectively
(Demacon 2014) However only a total of 222 units have been built and this shortfall was
largely attributed to the underlying dolomite geological conditions of the site (Bako and
Shibambo interview 2015)
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
The Sethokga hostel conversion project has been administered under the CRU
programme and forms part of a national agenda to convert hostels into family units
(Dyiki interview 2015) The target group under the CRU programme is individuals and
households earning between R800 and R3 500 per month who are able to enter what the
CRU programme has termed the lsquoformal private rental and social housing marketrsquo
(Demacon 2014)
The new residential units (the family units) are situated on ervan 128 and 5729 of the
Sethokga complex within the administrative jurisdiction of the Kempton Park Customer
Care Area (CCA) which is the administrative body conducting oversight of development
and town planning affairs for the Tembisa and Kempton Park areas (Demacon 2014)
The family units are three storey walk-ups and appear somewhat spacious and far more
appealing than the hostel structures The CRU proposes that bachelorsone bedroom
units of 20m2 to 35m2 should be allocated at a monthly rental of R270 ndash R450 a two
bedroom unit of 35m2-45m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R450 to R850 and
that a three bedroom unit of 45m2-80m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R850 ndash
R1650 Rentals have been and remain a contestation in a number of hostel conversion
projects across the country and Sethokga is no different According to the economic
representative for the ward Sololo interview (2015) the residents of Sethokga hostel are
contesting that they want to pay R150 for a one bedroom unit R200 for a two bedroom
unit and R300 for a three bedroom unit
According to the principles of the CRU programme the ownership of the rental housing
stock is to be reserved by either the Gauteng Provincial Department of Human
Page | 71
Settlement (GPDHS) or the EMM The ownership of the family units can be transferred by
the GPDHS to the EMM in line with the Housing Act no right(s) of ownership can be
transferred to tenants (Pienaar 2010)
The process of the Sethokga hostel conversion has on an administrative and government
support level been facilitated through a grant allocation from national government to
province (GPDHS) This grant has made provisions for pre-feasibility studies
socialcommunity facilitation the relocationreallocation of some residents (within the
hostel or to alternative sites to make way for demolition and construction of phase 1A)
and the consideration and compensation of construction costs and professional fees
(Majikijela interview 2015) The allocation of the units determining rental structures
applying indigent relief measures where necessary rental collection and maintenance
as well as the management of the family units are factors determined by the GPDHS and
the EMM cooperatively (Sololo interview 2015) The hostel residents are then at some
level consulted and lsquoencouragedrsquo to participate in this regard (Dyiki interview 2015)
Seemingly throughout project implementation the stakeholders have been kept informed
of the status and progress of the project With respect to notifying the hostel residents and
general public notices are placed in and around the hostel to inform them of meetings
and the ward councillorrsquos office take the lead on this (Mthethwa interview 2015)
There have been a number of communitypublic meetings that have taken place as the
project has progressed From the fieldwork I was not able to draw on precisely how many
meetings had taken place since or precisely when the meetings took place or what was
discussed in each of those meetings Generally the ward councillor said at least once a
month a consultative and progress report meeting would take place between the
various stakeholders where officials would engage the hostel residents and general
public
According to Majikijela interview (2015) the ward councillor and the economic rep the
main area of involvement on the part of the hostel residents has been in providing
labour A small percentage of the residents have been involved in the construction-work
and some of the clerical work on the project Their involvement in discussions on the
project is said to often be arbitrarily halted by political interference (Sololo interview
2015) For instance Bako interview (2015) the architect recalled that on the design of the
family units Liefa Architects did not talk to the end user ie the residents to ask them
what they wanted Instead a design which was informed by other examples of similar
projects was presented to the residents of Sethokga and the general public (Bako
interview 2015) ldquoThe design of the hostel was not lsquoexclusiversquo to Sethokga and its contextrdquo
(Bako interview 2015)
Page | 72
In relation to the size of the hostel and its residents only a very small percentage of the
hostel residents have been employed in the project the December 2013 January 2014
labour records reported the following
Table 1
Total workforce 66
Females 7
Males 59
Youth 28
Adults 38
Semi-skilled 20
Skilled 22
Disabled 0
General workers 24
Source LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor report
I was fortunate to have attended one of the community meetings that were held at an
old community hall within the vicinity of the hostel This meeting took place on a
Saturday the 15th of August 2015 and it was quite the experience There was a relatively
strong police presence at the meeting The police kept watch and managed the
activities inside and outside the community hall As there were concerns that the
proceedings might get out of hand and a possible tussle between those in attendance
might arise The meeting was chaired by the ward councillor and aside from the residents
of Sethokga in attendance was one official from the GPDHS an official from the EMM
community leaders and ANC committee members
There was an obvious and overwhelming male presence in the meeting tempers ran
high and there was an observable resistance from the residents of Sethokga to the
presence of the three females in the meeting This included me and two female
committee members Several times the meeting was disrupted by shouts and echoes of
discontentment questioning what women were doing at a meeting for men lsquordquothey have
no place here they do not even live hererdquo were the words of some of the men Our
presence seemed to really infuriate some of the men This was similar to what Ramphele
(1993) Segal (1991) Thurman (1997) and Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) observed in
their work and suggested that even now and within the context of Sethokga that the
men in the hostel are still quite at odds with having women as a part of their lsquogathering of
Page | 73
menrsquo and possibly even living among them The demeanour of some of the men in this
meeting suggested that they found the presence and role of women in these meetings
unneeded It was evident that these men had become far too accustomed to living
lsquoalonersquo as men Ramphele (1993) noted that the idea of an unambiguous constant and
unrestricted presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a serious point
of contention for some of men Some men expressed unwillingness while others a
struggle to comprehend or endorse this change that seemed overly unfamiliar and
challenging to come to grips with (Ramphele 1993) From my observation in this meeting
the same seems to hold true for Sethokga
The purpose of the meeting was to consult the hostel residents who were identified to be
the first recipients beneficiaries of the allocating of family units to consult them on issues
of final rental proposals allocation processes and status of the project The invitation for
this meeting was apparently only extended to those particular individuals but
subsequently the meeting was taken over by those who had objections to the process of
allocation rentals and why the meeting sought to exclude them and divide the residents
Generally the meeting was unruly and the ward councillor as well as the community
leaders and committee members struggled to manage the crowd and the rampant
tempers in the room
The agenda for the meeting is provided below to provide the reader with some context
and outline of the intension of the meeting Unfortunately tempers ran especially high in
this meeting and in my opinion none of the items on the agenda were successfully
addressed
Page | 74
Figure 8 August 15 community meeting agenda
Source Sethokga Community meeting 2015
521 Broad vision and aim of the project
The vision and aim of the project was described by the key informants who to some
extent unanimously used the following key words integration sustainability community
participation to improve peoplersquos lives restoring honour addressing the ills of hostel life
and bringing families into a safe and secure environment The housing officer for me
captured well the overall sentiments of the key informants when he said ldquowe are
surrounded and have so many companies in Tembisa so clearly you will find letrsquos say a
white guy working in the area but then they travel to Kempton Park or some other area
outside Tembisa and that is where they live So it would be nice to see him living in
Sethokga The project is about integration and not just integrating the residents of
Page | 75
Sethokga to the rest of the township but other ways of integration like racial integration
That is what I want to seerdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015)
Additionally the broad vision and aim of the hostel conversion project is to instil a culture
of payment into not just the hostel but the broader community ldquoPeople cannot just keep
wanting everything for free government cannot afford itrdquo The interviewees that
expressed this position were Majikijela Sololo Mthethwa Dyiki Bako and Shibambo
Seemingly under the CRU programme the project would seek to influence and instil this
culture of payment through the rental housing stock focus of the programme That
largely seeks to promote government owned and managed rental housing stock a
departure from the lsquofreersquo housing approach (Bako interview 2015)
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga development
Source Liefa Architects 2015
Phase 1B Phase 2B Phase 3B
Phase 1A Phase 2A
Phase 3A
Page | 76
What was surprising to me was that the family units are not intended to be occupied by
current residents only The idea is that some of the current residents would live elsewhere
and when this question was posed to the official from the GPDHS Majikijelarsquos interview
(2015) response was that the hostel residents who did not qualify in terms of the required
criteria for the renting of the units would be allocated RDPs in the neighbouring area of
Esselen Park but he could not provide clarity as to how and when this would happen
The vision of Sethokga that can be seen from the plan provided below is a reconfigured
locality Rehabilitated single-sex compounds into self contained family units furnished
with child care facilities park(s) garden(s) a community centre recreation facilities and
parking areas
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn
set out to address those needs and challenges
Although the CRU Programme only sets particular administrative operational and
project facilitation guidelines Arguably these guidelines do in some respect address
a number of the ills associated with hostels such as the issue of overcrowding lack of
privacy and poor living conditions (Pienaar 2010) Within Sethokga there are
challenges of tribalism high prevalence of HIV drug abuse alcohol abuse
criminality overcrowding lack of privacy possible health hazards a lack of ablution
facilities The hostel being unsafe for women (especially those who are staying in the
hostel illegally) was identified and shared by the key informants as some of the major
challenges confronting the hostel This view was shared by the ward councillor the
housing officer from the EMM the project manager from the GPDHS the consulting
engineer and the wardrsquos economic representative
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi the issue of tribalism occurred
as a result of what he recalls as a defining political shift ldquoafter the release of Mandela
and when they started preaching lsquothis thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions
happened according to who was Zulu or Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Here the ward councillor explains what he saw as
some of the factors that led to what is currently the strong predominance of Pedi and
Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel suggesting that
ldquoThey were mixed here when they started talking about negotiations that
there must be elections and then the IFP (Inkatha Freedom Party) was
rejecting that and that had nothing to do with membership it was a situation
of the warlords the Zulursquos terrorizing the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa
Page | 77
and standing with the white man The Zulursquos did not like that so that is where
the Zulu and Xhosa divide started and that is when you found that in
Sethokga it became predominantly more Xhosa there was fighting and war
the Zulursquos were chasing people out of their territory at the other hostels The
Xhosarsquos ran to Sethokga There was fighting everywhere even here in
Sethokga and all over the Pedis Vendas Tsongarsquos they all ran away from
those hostels where they were being chased out and they came hererdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
It was unclear as to the extent to which the project dealt with any of these
challenges and how or if they were factored into the project The project seems to
have a general lsquobest practicersquo approach to hostel conversion irrespective of the
circumstance of a particular hostel
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project
ldquoThe political volatility of the project poses an enormous threat to the successful
allocationletting of the family unitsrdquo (Majikijela interview 2015) On the part of the
key informants their continued inability to answer the perhaps not so simple question
of what would happen to those who could not afford the monthly rental of the family
units This suggested that the issue of rentals has remained a grey area even as the
project heads towards project completion ldquoWe will worry about that when we get
thererdquo was the brisk response to my inquiry on this matter Similar to what was
observed by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in the City Deep Redevelopment
project Sethokga faces a similar challenge
Certainly public community participation in any context is a complex and at times a
contentious exercise (Mdunyelwa 2015) I remain hesitant whether the Sethokga
hostel conversion project has been able to lsquotrulyrsquo engage residents and the broader
community in a transparent and reciprocal manner Seemingly affordability will be
the determining factor of who will be able to rent a unit To those who cannot afford
it stands to be seen what remedy will be extended to them
Moreover the following factors were cited as some of the limitations of the project
the lack of transparency political interference an inadequate dissemination of
information to residentscommunity and the projects failure to respond to what the
solution(s) will be for lsquonon-qualifyingrsquo residents who cannot afford the monthly rentals
Page | 78
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful
I wanted to find out from the key informants particularly those who have been
directly involved in the conversion project what for them would constitute a
successful project and how from their point of view the residents and the greater
community would know that the project is completed and has been
successfulunsuccessful Overall the leading response was that a project would be
successful when the family units are occupied Some of the interviewees added that
the process of allocating the units and resolving the myriad of issues are most
certainly likely to cause further delays and will require intricate resolution (ie peoplersquos
unwillingness and otherrsquos inability to pay tension and opposition to paying rentals
opening the letting to tenants who are not hostel residents and so forth)
In summary the thoughts shared by the housing office at the EMM and the wardrsquos
economic representative capture in essence the general position held by every one
of the key informants
ldquoFor me a complete project will be the units functioning on their own and then
people will be told during a public meeting We also need to involve the mayor the
MECs and the media People will be told that it is finished and this is what is going to
happenrdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015) ldquoAfter it has been completed I want to see 80
percent of the people who have been staying in the hostel still residing in the hostel
It must not just be open to whomever There are people as far as Johannesburg who
want to stay here because they see it being comfortable and nice forgetting we are
looking to improve the lives of the current hostel dwellers There are even those in the
township who think that people of the hostel cannot pay so this is not for themrdquo
(Sololo interview 2015)
Page | 79
53 Visual narrative of the family units
531 Architectural designsplans
The design of the family units is what the architect referred to as a multi-storey approach
ldquoThe three storey walk-ups address the need for housing much better than an RDP wouldrdquo
(Bako interview 2015) They have an urban apartment-like feel about them but the
mundane (uniform) paintwork gives them a distinct government provided social housing feel
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development plan
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 80
Figure 12 Architects Section E - E
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 11 Architects Section F ndash F
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 13 South Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 81
Figure 14 North Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 15 East Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 16 West Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 82
532 The project site of family units
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site
View of the site of the family units from one of
the hostel blocks situated adjacent to the
construction site across the street
Construction of the family units
commenced in August of 2011
Site notice placed at the entrance of the
family units construction site
The Sethokga community hall situated at
the entrance to the family units
construction site and adjacent to the
council offices
Page | 83
For the most partthe construction of the
family units is nearing completetion
Walking through the site personally I felt that
the family units had a somewhat prominent
RDP lsquolookrsquo about them
Ground floor view
The entrance into the construction site of the
family units and the site office which is
situtated within the vicinity of the site
Page | 84
533 Inside the Family units
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units
Doorway into one of the three bedroom
family units which leads into an open plan
dining and kitchen area
Each unit has its own dining sitting and
kitchen area
The construction site is lsquopolicedrsquo by the Red
Ants (a private security company)around the
clock and also a private security company
Some of the security members seen on site
they insisted I take a picture of them to
include in this study
Page | 85
Built-in sink and geyser
The family
units offer a number of distinct qualities that
the hostel clearly does not have which
include privacy and a dignified living
environmentspace
Each unit has its bathroom with a built-in
toilet bath and shower
Shower
Separate and additional toilet as part of the
three bedroom family units
The diningsitting area and two adjacent
bedrooms
Page | 86
The site of the family units is being guarded by a private security company and members
of the Red Ants (a private security company) When asked about this the official (the
project manager overseeing the Sethokga hostel conversion project) from the GPDHS
said that this was necessary to ensure that no unauthorised occupations take place This
was also to guard against any possible vandalism or the looting of materialsequipment
or the site office (Majikijela interview 2015)
54 Summary of main themes and findings
This study had a number of themes which resonate with the case study The localised
context of Sethokga hostel offered great insights into the current state of hostels as
spaces and places that still largely exist within a context of volatility poor living conditions
and complex socio-economic challenges (Thurman 1997) The historic exploits on hostels
revealed and I suppose confirmed that the hostel system was established supported and
perpetuated by methodical policy and controls to discourage the permanent settlement
of Africans in urban areas or any intention of relocating their family to urban areas (Segal
1991) Furthermore within the contemporary South African context this has posed a
number of challenges and has been a longstanding reality of a number of hostel dwellers
as observed in the work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010)
The view from one of the family units (a ground
floor three bedroom unit) is onto the ward
councillorrsquos offices and the hostel in the
distance
One of the three bedrooms in the family
units
Page | 87
Sethokga hostel is also one of many hostels that exist within a historically-laden context
The strong prominence of Pedi and Xhosa native speaking men in some respect also
speaks to the events of circular migration that are still a lived-reality of the men of
Sethokga This according to the ward councillor has meant that the men have had to
maintain ties with their families in the Eastern Cape and Limpopo while most of them live
in Sethokga away from their families (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) In terms of gender
issues the aspect of men and housing the hostel conversion project does not adopt a
particular stand on this Seemingly the project makes no effort to appreciate the
apparent rural location of the wives partners children and families of a vast majority of
the men in Sethokga The idea is that anyone who is able to afford the monthly rental of
the family units can sign a lease agreement and rent a unit However this presents a
number of issues and leaves a lot unaccounted for and unanswered ie will the families
of the men in the hostels make a transition to join them in the family units Is this even a
possibility for them what impact would this have on the already stretched social
amenities in the area Arguably in the case of Sethokga this oversight has been a serious
area of contention and has amplified the political volatility of the project
The heavy-handedness of the hostel system cunningly imposed a sense of no escape
yet quite interestingly the later unwillingness to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have their
hostel converted into family units (Thurman 1997)
Among the key findings of the research report is that the lsquorental onlyrsquo tenure option and
approach to the hostel conversion project was the biggest challenge and one of the
most critical points of contention (Pienaar 2010) On the one hand the hostel residents
are arguing that they cannot afford the proposed rentals while on the other hand
officials are of the opinion that this is in fact untrue and not wholly representative of the
attitude(s) of all the hostel residents Thus a supposed unwillingness to pay and a culture
of entitlement was cited by the key informants as the underlying state of affairs and one
that posed the biggest threat to the project and in particular how the family units would
be allocated
Although the project is for the most part about converting Sethokga hostel into family
units in principal it is also about redress integration improving the living conditions of
Sethokga residents reconfiguring the mental and physical landscape of hostels in
contemporary South Africa and introducing children and women into the hostel
Integration was repeatedly cited by the key informants as the main imperative of the
study Political interference and the very particular sensitivities around political allegiance
Page | 88
(keeping in the mind the local elections are fast approaching) are factors that were
cited would cause the greatest difficulty in the allocation of the family units
54 Conclusion
Undoubtedly the Sethokga hostel conversion project has a number of components and
features to it that are complex in part ambiguous and would require further and more
detailed study Seemingly the CRU programme is a lsquodeparturersquo from the Hostel
Redevelopment Programme In part it offers prospects to facilitate the provision of
affordable rental tenure for those earning below R3500 while seeking to promote the
integration of publicsocial housing into the broader housing market Under the
administration of the CRU programme one of the leading aims is to facilitate the creation
of sustainable public housing assets (Pienaar 2010) However the CRU programme has
been criticised as a framework that is largely operating in a policy environment that is
hostile elaborate and not speaking to the needs of the people on the ground
Furthermore many see it as solely a hostel upgrading policy viewed often to be done
impromptu in response to local pressures (Pienaar 2010) To paraphrase Pienaar (2010)
the vagueness regarding the roles and responsibilities of the respective provincial
department of human settlement and municipalities has not provided much confidence
in hostel conversion projects
Chapter five has examined the Sethokga hostel conversion project and attempted to
unpack how the project has been conceptualised This chapter has identified and
outlined the main components of the project its main stakeholders and what has been
their role in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Discussed were the project phases a
number of critical elements such as how the project has understood the needs and
challenges of the hostel residents In addition to this chapter five outlined the way(s) in
which the residents have been involved in the project if the project considered anything
important in terms of gender issues and if what have these been factored into the
project By and large chapter five drew extensively on the findings of the fieldwork and
made an effort to narrate some of the insights and perspectives shared by the key
informants To conclude the chapter a collage of diagrams and images were presented
to offer the reader a visual narrative of the site of the family units
Page | 89
Concluding chapter
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoWhat does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
61 Review and reflections
This research report consisted of six chapters chapter one introduced the study
chapter two provided the theoretical backdrop of the study chapter three
introduced the study area (Sethokga hostel) chapter four discussed the evolution of
hostel redevelopment conversion and what has been the states approach to hostel
conversion and chapter five examined the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project
In chapter one the main point of discussion was the research question outlining the
aim and objectives of the study and the research methodology
Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project been conceptualised
in how the project has been conceptualised does it address the stigma of hostel life
and it what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What informed the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail what is the broad aim and vision
of the project what is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
Page | 90
In chapter one it was also argued that this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects had somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore that there needed to be more inquiry and
study conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel
conversion projects
The studyrsquos theoretical backdrop was discussed in chapter two The aim of this was to
contextualise the term hostels as to clearly illustrate what is meant by it In addition
to drawing on particular strands of literature concepts ideas and arguments that
resonated with the study Chapter two argued that the historically the landscape of
hostels has by and large been complex at times perplexing and highly contentious
Chapter three introduced Sethokga hostel It elaborated on the locality of the hostel
and its local as well as municipal context A visual narrative of the hostel was also
provided and this captured the current state of the hostel and the conditions in which
its residents endure It was established that ironically the conditions in the hostel are
not much different to many of the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg
The hostel was badly designed poorly built and is suffering years of neglect it is in
appalling and overcrowded condition
Chapter four described the evolution of hostel redevelopment conversion in the
country and what has been the states approach to hostel conversion post-1994 This
chapter discussed in some detail the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme Arguing that these programmes have to
date been the lsquoforerunnersrsquo of the statersquos approach to addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo
While in chapter five the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
was examined Chapter five was the crux of this research report The discussions in the
chapters before it set up the groundwork for a critical exploration of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project and for unpacking the research question
Chapter six concludes this study and seeks to answer the question ldquoso what does this
mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo Since this
report was conducted as part of the requirements for the partial fulfilment of an
Urban and Regional Planning honours qualification It is important to address the ldquoso
what for plannersrsquo question and the value that this report stands to offer to the
Page | 91
planning profession Firstly let us reflect on what have been some of the limitations of
the study
62 Limitations of the study
For the most part this study had a wealth of information and sources to draw from
The insights and wisdom provided by the key informants were invaluable their
willingness and enthusiasm to participate in this study was not something I had
anticipated but I remain truly grateful
Due to certain constraints more especially time constraints and the particular scope
focus of the research report this posed some limitations to the study In only
interviewing and engaging with officials and not with the residents of Sethokga the
voices opinions and views of the officials told only one side of a many-sided story
How the project affects and has affected the residents Is this something they want
support and for those who do not what are some of their reasons for contention Is
circular migration still as prominent a feature within the current context of Sethokga
What is the present-day nature of household configurations in the hostels (is the duty
of the older men still to order the actions of the younger men ie the cleaning and up
keeping of the communal area and other household duties) what for the residents
of Sethokga would constitute a successful project
Even as this study concludes the side of the hostel residents remains largely untold
and unreported Furthermore the supposed apathy on the part of the hostel residents
and the views expressed by the key informants that family units offer the most ideal
and best alternative to the residents of Sethokga could not be explored and
interrogated further given the limitations of the scope of the study
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners
Within contemporary South Africa there have certainly been a vast number of
conflicting views held regarding what should be the role and future of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Although academics policy makers bureaucrats developers and
the general public have usually been unable to reach longstanding middle-ground
on what should be done about hostels One of the more widely held views is that
hostels certainly present a real challenge but also an opportunity For government
Page | 92
developers non-government organisations (NGOs) built environment practitioners
and needless to say the residents of hostels themselves (Thurman 1997)
Planners are frequently cast in the role of performing a balancing act (Campbell
2006) As a result the adaptability of the planning profession as a coherent and
impartial discipline has over the years become rather topical subjects (Campbell
2006) This has inevitably continued to require new and innovative ways of lsquoseeingrsquo
lsquocomprehendingrsquo and lsquodoingrsquo things in order to shape and re-shape an inherently
divergent and historic-laden urban landscape (Jupp and Inch 2012) In the midst of
the shifts in the traditional conception and role of the planning profession as a merely
procedural and administrative activity (Harrison and Kahn 2002) planning is still to a
great extent closely tied to government structures (Cornwall 2002) Therefore within
this particular context of government driven intervention urban planning
professionals stand to be instrumental facilitators of development and offer essential
expertise and tools towards addressing some of the challenges within our urban
landscape (Albert and Kramsch 1999)
This study observed a range of intertwined urban dynamics ie around housing socio-
economic distress a wavering political climate and the need to be more
environmentally conscientious This necessitates focused attention and much
consideration as the political economic social and environmental junctures in which
planning has come to operate has meant that the profession has become
susceptible to external pressures scrutiny and influence (Campbell and Marshall
2002)
64 Conclusion
South Africa has for a number of years into democracy been at a critical time of
limited housing supply and a desperate need for housing (Khan and Thurman 2001)
(Pienaar
2010) Planners have an important role to play in facilitating coordinating and
effecting the reconfiguration of the urban landscape towards improving the setting
of inherently socio-economically ailing spaces such as hostels (Jupp and Inch 2012)
Hostels have largely remained as spaces that have continued to perpetuate
underdevelopment inequality and disempowerment (Khan and Thurman 2001) If
family units are to wholly address the stigma of hostel life and the convoluted nature
Page | 93
of hostels to alter the landscape of hostels and define a novel future for hostels and
their residents It is certain that this will require decisive action collaborative efforts
and the wisdom of retrospection
Page | 94
List of references
African National Congress 1994 The Reconstruction and Development Programme A
policy framework ANC Johannesburg
African National Congress (2003) Briefing note 5 Housing
httpwwwancorgzaelections2004briefingshousingpdf
Albert A and Kramsch O (1999) Space Inequality and Difference lsquoRadical Turns
and lsquoCultural Termsrdquo European Planning Studies 7(1) 77 ndash 79
Bandyopadhyay S and Green E (2008) Nation-building and Conflict in Modern
Africa The Suntory Centre
Barnett C (1999) Broadcasting the Rainbow Nation Media Democracy and Nation-
building in South Africa Editorial Board of Antipode 31 (3) 274-303
Benit-Gbaffou C and Mathoho M (2010) A case study of participation in the City
Deep Hostel Redevelopment Project Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Bonner P and Nieftagodien N (2012) Ekurhuleni the making of an urban region
Wits University Press
Campbell H and Marshall R (2002) Values and professional identities in planning
practice in Allmendinger R And Tewdwr-Jones M (eds) Planning futures new
directions for planning theory London Routledge
Castles S and M J (Millerl (2008) The Age of Migration International Population
Movements in the Modern World New York The Guilford Press
Charlton S et al (2014) From Housing to Human Settlement Evolving Perspectives
South African Cities Network
Chipkin I and Meny-Gibert S (2011) Why the Past matters Histories of the Public
Service in South Africa PARI Short Essays number 1 Johannesburg PARI
Collinson M A and K Adazu (2006) The INDEPTH Network A demographic resource
on migration and urbanisation in Africa and Asia Views on Migration in Sub-Saharan
Africa Proceedings of an African Migration Alliance Workshop C Cross D
Gelderblom N Roux and J Mafukidze Cape Town HSRC Press 159- 172
Page | 95
Collinson M A (2006) Health Impacts of Social Transition A study of Female
Temporary Migration and its impact on Child Mortality in Rural South Africa A
dissertation submitted to the School of Public Health University of the Witwatersrand
in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master in Science in the branch of
Medicine
Cornwall A (2002) Making Spaces Changing Places Situating Participation in
Development Institute of Development Studies IDS Working Paper 170
Creswell J W (2009) Research Design Qualitative Quantitative and Mixed Methods
Approaches 3rd Edition Los Angeles Sage Publications Inc
Demacon 2014 Sethokga hostels mixed typology market analysis market research
Findings and recommendations
Department of Human Settlements Republic of South Africa Programmes and
Subsidies document assessed on 7 July 2015 from
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentspublicationshuman_settlement
s_programmes_and_subsidiespdf
Department of Social Development Republic of South Africa White Paper on
Families in South Africa 2012
Dyiki M (2006) City of Cape Town Integrating Families Hostels to Homes
Redevelopment Programme Presentation
httpswwwwesterncapegovzatext200652006_hostels_presentation-_dyikipdf
Fritz V and Menocal A R (2007) Understanding State-Building from a Political
Economy Perspective An Analytical and Conceptual Paper on Processes
Embedded Tensions and Lessons for International Engagement Report for DFIDrsquos
Effective and Fragile States Teams Overseas Development Institute
Greenberg S and Mathoho M (2010) ldquoConceptual Framework on Public
Participation and Developmentrdquo Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Page | 96
Grieger L et al (2013) Moving Out and Moving In Evidence of Short-Term Household
Change in South Africa from the National Income Dynamics Study
Goldblatt B amp Meintjes S (1996) Gender and the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission a submission to the TRC May
Harrison P And Kahn M (2002) The ambiguities of change the case of the planning
profession in the province of KwaZulu-Natal South Africa in Thornley A and Rydin Y
(eds) Planning in the global era Aldershot Ashgate
Jupp E and Inch A (2012) Planning as a profession in uncertain times Town Planning
Review Vol 83 No 5
Khan F and Thurman S (2001) Setting the Stage Current Housing Policy and
Debate in South Africa Isandla Institute
Liefa Consulting (2015) Maps diagrams source
LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor
report
Mapetla M M (2005) Aspects of urban housing for women and men in Southern
Africa Roma Lesotho National University of Lesotho
Marshall M N (1996) Sampling for qualitative research Family Practice Oxford
University Press
Mosoetsa S (2011) Eating from one pot the dynamics of survival in poor South
African households Johannesburg Wits University Press
Mdunyelwa M L (2015) Public Participation in Hostel Redevelopment Programs in
Nyanga and Langa Dissertation presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in
the Faculty of Arts and Social Science at Stellenbosch University
National Housing Report (2009) -
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentsnational_housing_20092_Techn
ical_General_Guidelines
Netshitenzhe J (2011) A Developmental State South Africarsquos developmental
Capacity UCT Summer School Mapungubwe Institute for Strategic Reflection
Page | 97
Peoples Housing Programme httpwwwjoburg-
archivecozacity_visionannualreport2002-03chapter10pdf
Pienaar J S and Cloete C E (2005) Hostel Conversion as Social Housing in South
Africa Funding Regime VS Real Needs Case Study of the Sethokga Hostel Conversion
Project Pacific Rim Real Estate Society (PRRES)
Pienaar J (2010) Community Residential Units key elements application implications
for Metros Municipal Leadership Housing Forum0
Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the Community Residential Units
Programme 2006
httpwwwgovzaabout-governmentgovernment-programmescommunity-
residential-unit-cru-programme
Ramphele M (1993) A Bed Called Home Life in the Migrant Labour Hostels of Cape
Town Ohio Ohio University Press
Segal L (1991) The Human Face of Violence Hostel dwellers speak In The Journal of
Southern African Studies Vol 18 No 1
SJN Development Planning Consultants (2000) Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial
Development Framework
South African Department of Housing 2008 Community Residential Programme
httpwwwhousinggovzaContentCRUHomehtm
South African Local Government Association
httpwwwsalgaorgzaappwebrootassetsfilesGuidelines20for20Municipalities
Flyer20rental20housing20NMApdf
South African Yearbook 20122013
httpwwwsouthafricanewyorknetconsulateYearbook2020131320Human20S
ettlemp
Statistics South Africa Census (2001) Concepts and Definitions Report
httpswwwStatistics+South+Africa+Census+(2001)+Concepts+and+Definitions+Repo
rt+03-02-26+Version
Thurman S (1997) Umzamo improving hostel dwellersrsquo accommodation in South
Africa Environment and Urbanisation Vol 9 No 2
Page | 98
Urban Sector Network Final Report August 2000 ndash April 2003 Hostel Redevelopment
httppdfusaidgovpdf_docsPdaby792pdf
Van der Berg S (2010) Current poverty and income distribution in the context of
South African history Stellenbosch Economic Working Papers 2210
Von Holdt K (2010) Nationalism Bureaucracy and Developmental State The South
African Case South African Review of Sociology Volume 41 Number 1
Watt A (2012) Essentials of project management
httpopentextbccaprojectmanagement
Ziehl S C (2001) Documenting Changing Family Patterns in South Africa Are Census
Data of any Value African Sociological Review 5(2)
Interviews with key informants
Shibambo Vincent Resident Engineer LTE Consulting Interview 14thAugust 2015
(Sethokga family units project site)
Mthethwa Jabu Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Housing Officer Interview 17
August 2015 (Ekurhuleni Kempton Park Housing Offices)
Mohlapamaswi Ward Councillor ANC Tembisa Ward 4 Interview 18 August 2015
(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers
Sololo Lufefe Ward 4 Economic Development Representative Interview 18 August
2015(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers)
Majikijela Sisa Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlements Sethokga
Hostel Conversion Project Manager Interview 19 August 2015 (Sethokga family units
project site boardroom)
Dyiki Malibongwe Housing Development Agency Official 7 September 2015
(Housing Development Agency head office Killarney Johannesburg)
Bako Simba Liefa Architects Interview 9 September (LTE House Sunninghill
Johannesburg)
Page | 9
224 The stigma of hostel life31
225 Family versus household configurations32
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing33
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy35
228The role and significance of communitypublic participation in hostel conversion
projects35
23 Conclusion38
Chapter three Introducing Sethokga hostel39
3 Introduction39
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)39
311 Geographic description of the study area41
312 Locality44
313 Local and municipal context45
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel50
321 Built formArchitecture50
322 Municipal services54
323 The adjoining area55
33 Conclusion56
Chapter four The states approach to hostel conversion58
4 Introduction58
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach58
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach59
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme59
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process60
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing61
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised
Housing61
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country62
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme63
44 The Community Residential Units Programme65
45 Conclusion67
Chapter five The Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project68
5 Introduction68
Page | 10
51 Outline of the main components of the project68
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project68
512 Project phases69
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project70
521 Broad vision and aim of the project74
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and
in turn set to address those needs and challenges76
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project77
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful78
53 Visual narrative of the site of the family units79
531Architectural designsplans79
532 The project site of the family units82
533 Inside the family units84
53 Summary of main themes and findings86
54 Conclusion88
Chapter six Concluding chapter89
61 Review and reflections89
62 Limitations of the study91
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners91
64 Conclusion92
List of references94
Page | 11
Pages
Maps
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni
hostel and Vusimuzi hostel40
Map 2 Locality map44
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex45
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework48
Figures
Figure 1 Ground floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 2 First floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 3 Elevation of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 4 Collage of exterior imagery of the hostel50
Figure 5 Collage of interior imagery of the hostel52
Figure 6 Municipal amenities54
Figure 7 The adjoining area55
Figure 8 Community meeting agenda74
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga developmenthelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip76
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development planhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip79
Figure 11 Architects Section F-Fhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figue 12 Architects Section E-Ehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figure 13 South Elevation80
Figure 14 North Elevatonhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip81
Figure 15 East Elevation81
Figure 16 West Elevation81
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site82
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units84
Table
Table 1 Total workforce in the period December 2013 - January 2014 Sethokga
sitehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip72
Page | 12
ANC African National Congress
Cllr Councillor
CRU Community Residential Units
DoHS Department of Human Settlements
EMM Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
GPDHS Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement
HRP Hostel Redevelopment Programme
IDP Integrated Development Plan
IFP Inkatha Freedom Party
MSDF Metropolitan Spatial Development Framework
PWV Pretoria ndash Witwatersrand ndash Vereeniging
RDP Reconstruction and Development Programme
SDF Spatial Development Framework
USAID United States Agency for International Development
USN Urban Sector Network
Page | 13
Chapter one will essentially introduce the research report The aim of this chapter is as
follows highlight the objective of the study provide a background to the study and
also discuss the rationale and problem statement In addition to detailing the
research question the significance of this study and the research methodology will
also be reviewed
Coincidently this research report is written and takes place at a time where there has
been somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms With the prevailing question being ldquoWhat iscontinues to be the
role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo Although this study will not in effect
actively seek to answer that particular question it presents a valuable premise for this
study ldquoFamily units to address the stigma of hostel liferdquo
The main aim of this chapter is to contextualise hostel to position the study within an
expanded theoretical framework The main chapter will in part argue that hostels
have largely remained as urban enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric and
that the rigid structures of regulation and control which were imposed on hostel
dwellers have perpetuated a complex state of affairs The literature review section
which details some of the key concepts theories ideas and arguments on the topic
will elaborate further on this
This chapter aims to provide a comprehensive description of the study area and so it
is in this chapter that the local as well as municipal context of the study area will
altogether be considered The aim of this chapter is to provide the reader with a sort
of lsquofeelrsquo of Sethokga hostel and its present-day circumstance It will attempt to
articulate to the reader the authors own experience and account of the study area
Page | 14
in an effort to provide the reader with a well-versed narrative of the multifaceted
nature of the hostel and the complex reality in which its residents endure
The South African statersquos approach to hostel redevelopment conversion is
discussed It is argued that the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of hostel
redevelopment conversion Chapter four discusses a number of state policy and
approaches addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo Ahead of this however the evolution of the
hostel redevelopment conversion approach is examined which dates back to the
earliest (soon after 1994) efforts by the South African government to remedy the ills of
the hostel system
Chapter five examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seeks to unpack
the conceptualisation of the project This chapter reflects and draws extensively on
the findings of the field work and the invaluable insights offered by the key informants
The main components of the hostel conversion project are examined and the vision
of Sethokga personified by the hostel conversion project is presented in chapter five
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoSo what does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
Page | 15
Introductory chapter
In the wake of the political transition in South Africa in 1994 and for some time
preceding this time frame violence squalor overcrowding and socio-political strife
had long become characteristic of some of the features associated with hostels and
the stigma of hostel life (Thurman 1997) Due to its history as systematically
disempowered yet politically vocal enclaves we have come to know or perhaps be
familiar with hostels as highly contentious and antagonistic environments with a
burdened local identity (Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The stigma of hostel life constitutes among a host of conditions an innate reality
where the residents of hostels inhibit isolated destitute and unbecoming spaces
(Segal 1991) Built as single-sex labour compounds to accommodate African migrant
labourers for the duration of their stay in South Africarsquos white urban areas hostels
occupy a unique position within the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape
(Thurman 1997) As sojourners in South Africarsquos white urban areas the law
constructed a lsquolegalrsquo person called a labourer who was lsquoauthorisedrsquo to temporarily
reside in the urban space but had to retreat to their rural quarters once their lsquoservicersquo
had been concluded (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Thus to draw attention to the
unkindness of their living conditions many hostel dwellers have continued for the
better part of South Africarsquos democracy to lsquochoosersquo physical violence as a tool
perceived to best serve and afford some attention to their troubles (Pienaar and
Crofton 2005)
Within the context of this research report the term hostels widely refer to single-sex
dormitory style labour compounds which emerged in South Africa under the
apartheid system and ideology of separate development (Pienaar and Crofton
2005) The ideology of separate development and the resultant influx control policies
were a distinctive trait of the government of a particular juncture in the countryrsquos
history - a government that as part of its mandate held to discourage the permanent
settlement of the African populace in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) This further
translated itself in the governmentrsquos refusal to plan and consent to any sort of
lsquomeaningfulrsquo investment into areas designated for the other who were primarily
located in the townships on the periphery of the urban terrain (Ramphele 1993)
Page | 16
Badly designed poorly built and suffering many years of neglect hostels were
primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for the comfort of hostel
dwellers (Thurman 1997) Conceivably the hostel system socialised its inhabitants into
an undignified and callous condition which has in some respect persisted and has
unfortunately not wholly been reconciled (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In hostels that
were male occupied hostel dwellers were regarded as lsquomen of four worldsrsquo which
referred to their present and existing life within the hostel the surrounding township(s)
places of work and their rural homes (Segal 1991) The hostel system made it
impossible for hostel dwellers to live in the hostel with their families ie wives
husbands partners children (Segal 1991) This consequence is particularly important
to note at this early stage in the report because of the wisdom and context it adds as
the study progresses
Coincidently this research is written and takes place at a time where there has been
somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms Undoubtedly the prevailing question has been ldquoWhat is should be
the role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo The current Minister of Human
Settlements has said that ldquohostels no longer have a place within South Africarsquos
democratically reconfigured state and so the state needs to get rid of hostelsrdquo (Sisulu
2015) However in a nation such as South Africa efforts towards transition are
ambiguous complex and can often be marked by violence (Mosoetsa 2011)
According to Thurman (1997) of an estimated 604 000 hostel beds around the country
in the late 1990s accommodated whole families relatively close to urban centres
Furthermore Thurman argues that hostels present both a significant challenge and an
opportunity for government NGOs developers and hostel dwellers themselves High
density housing stock stood to gain a considerably large supply of low income
(Thurman 1997) Even while a large number of hostel redevelopmentconversion
projects continue to be riddled with tension and difficulty the prospect(s) for change
and reform that they offer cannot simply be dismissed
This study seeks to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel conversion project to
develop an informed understanding of the defining features and characteristics of
this particular hostel conversion project It examines what is and what has been the
nature of engagement and dialogue between the various stakeholders involved and
discusses the insights they were able to offer to this study In 2015 21 years into South
Page | 17
Africarsquos democracy we have to wonder what is needed to make amends and offset
the dishonour of hostel life
11 Background to the study
We have to understand what the hostel system did was to lsquoaccommodatersquo the
African populace in single-sex labour compounds (Segal 1991) Upon their arrival
their presence in urban areas was constrained as they were met with strict rules and
restrictions (Ramphele 1993) In turn social relations were severally volatile and
ambiguous under the hostel system as hostel dwellers were constrained in their ability
to interact in certain or in their own chosen ways (Thurman 1997) There have been a
number of authors who have noted that the notion of family was partly if not entirely
redefined under this system (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were designed with little or no
thought given of human comfort security and interaction and many are still in
appalling neglected and overcrowded conditions (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) For
many people hostels represent a bitter and hopeless reminder of the past while for
others they are a well prized and affordable shelter in an environment of serve
homelessness (Thurman 1997)
Accordingly soon after 1994 South Africarsquos democratic government made some
attempt to convert hostels into environments suitable for family life although the
extent of this has not entirely been clear (DoHS 2015) This was met with hostility
violence and unwillingness by some hostel dwellers particularly those in the Pretoria
Witwatersrand and Vereeniging (PWV) region to have their hostels
convertedredeveloped into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010) The
violence that had become synonymous with hostel life became an overwhelming
impediment that proved difficult to overcome (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that the idea of an unambiguous constant and unrestricted
presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a point of contention for
some of the men who had far too long become accustomed to living lsquoalonersquo as
men Some expressed unwillingness while others found it a struggle to comprehend or
endorse this change that seemed far too unfamiliar and a challenge to come to
grips with (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Thus in hostels where hostel conversion projects have since taken-off the general
attitudes perceptions and reception of the projects have in some respects continued
to be negative and unwelcomed Scepticism tension and hostility add to the already
complex nature of the hostel conversion projects (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
Page | 18
2010) Hostels are still largely spaces confronted with deep social injustices (ie poor
living conditions a lack of privacy overcrowded) and are an insult to the dignity of
their occupants in several ways as both spatially limited and socio-economically
limiting spaces (Ramphele 1993) The limits imposed by hostels onto hostel dwellers
have persisted in protracting unkindness and a distorted conception of the
fundamental purpose of housing Hostels remain as an unfortunate symbol of a
former governmentrsquos refusal and failure to acknowledge the personhood (the
position and quality of being an individual or having feelings perspectives integrity
and human characteristics needs and wants) of the men and women they housed
(Ramphele 1993)
12 Rationale
Arguably hostel conversion projects and particularly the conceptualisation of these
projects is still a relatively under-researched field Based on my efforts to find
published work on the subject and even though there have been a number of
hostels across the country which have undergone or are undergoing hostel
conversion this remains a rather neglected study field
Hostels within their historic make-up were for the most part premised on fairly uniform
ideals arrangements and gender configurations The demographic setting within
some hostels across the country have since become a lot more fluid and departed
from their former mandatory construct (as strictly single-sex spaces) In what were
predominantly male occupied hostels women and children have since moved into
some of those hostels
Sethokga hostel which will serve as the case study for this research is a hostel that is
still predominantly male occupied but is undergoing hostel conversion to convert the
hostel into family units I believe that the fact that the hostel is still predominantly
male occupied presents an intriguing dimension to this study on hostel conversion
and efforts to grapple with the research question
13 Problem statement
In the case of Sethokga hostel a hostel conversion project is underway but it is not
clear what has sparked such a conversion and to what extent it is driven by the
available policies or assessments of needs or what attempt has been made to meet
these needs Subsequently what would the conversion of a predominantly male
Page | 19
dominated hostel rife with historically inherent conditions necessitate Therefore
how has the conversion project grasped the experience of men within such a hostel
and how has it grasped the concept of family life
14 Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units been conceptualised and
based upon the conceptualised ideas does it address the stigma of hostel life and it
what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What led to the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail What is the broad aim and vision
of the project What is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
15 The significance of the study - positioning the study relative to existing academic
literature
The significance of this research report lies in what I believe is a gap in the scope of
work covered over the years on hostels particularly on hostel conversion projects
Based on my efforts to find published work on the subject questions around what
these projects entail their implications relevance and impact remain unanswered
In the work I have managed to access so far this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects has somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore there needs to be more inquiry and study
conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel conversion
projects
As documented by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) there are vast and intricate
layers of engagement communication participation and even discontentment
Page | 20
involved in hostel conversion projects For instance the legitimacy around where
decision-making lies and which avenues are or should be available to voice
concerns have been some of the challenges relating to hostel conversion and have
added to the already complex nature of these projects
There is most certainly room for a study to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel
conversion project and probe this idea that family units could serve as an adequate
tool for the apt reform of hostels as many of us have come to know them associate
with them or even disassociate from them
16 Aim and objectives of the research
The main aim of this research report is to examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project and how the project has been conceptualised
Objectives
To examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
To develop a more comprehensive understanding of the hostel conversion
approach relative to the socio-economic and political context of the hostel
To explore the possibility and potential of family units as a viable tool to
addressing the stigma of hostel life
To examine how the project has understood the needs and challenges of the
residents and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
To examine the specific spatial focus of the project
17 Research methodology
171 Type of research
The methodology used in the study is a qualitative approach to research and semi-
structured interviews were conducted as the primary means of data collection
Additionally the data collection process involved the use of a variety of sources
which ranged from books journal articles newspaper articles and online media
platforms in the form of articles and radio podcasts
Page | 21
According to Cresswell (2009) this particular method to research (a qualitative
method) entails among other things the use of horizontal dialogue conversation and
the exchange of ideas between the interviewer and the interviewees (Cresswell
2009) Key informants were identified on the basis of their knowledge of andor
involvement in the Sethokga hostel conversion project and the following individuals
were interviewed
1st interviewee Mr Vincent Shibambo resident engineer with LTE consulting (the
company facilitating the construction and administration of the project) Interview
conducted 14th August 2015 at the project site The interview took place in the
boardroom of the project site offices
2nd interviewee Mr Jabu Mthethwa housing officer from the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality Interview conducted 17th August 2015 the interview took place in Mr
Mthethwarsquos office at the council offices in the Kempton Park CBD area
3rd interviewee ANC Ward 4 Tembisa Ward Councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi Interview
conducted 18th August 2015 in the ward councillorrsquos office at the ward councillors
chambers situated adjacent to the project site offices within the vicinity of the hostel
4th interviewee Mr Lufefe Sololo Ward 4 Tembisa Economic Development Rep (Mr
Sololo sits on the ward committee that advises the ward councillor) Interview
conducted 18th of August 2015 at Sethokga hostel
5th interviewee Mr Sisa Majikijela official from the Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlements Mr Majikijela is the current project manager of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project Interview conducted 19th of August 2015 in the boardroom
of the project site offices
6th interviewee Mr Malibongwe Dyiki who was a resident of a hostel in Cape Town in
the early 1980s He then became a community representative in later years and then
moved on to be a government official facilitating hostel redevelopments in the
Western Cape He has written and published on hostels and has also participated in
policy discussions on the Hostel Redevelopment Programme Interview was done on
the 7th of September 2015 at the Housing Development Agencyrsquos head office in
Killarney Johannesburg where he is currently working as the Programme Manager for
the mining towns programme
7th interviewee Simba Bako architect with Liefa Architects (appointed by LTE
consulting Liefa Architects were responsible for the design of the family units)
Page | 22
Interview conducted on the 9th of September 2015 at LTE House in Sunninghill
Johannesburg
172 What kind of information is needed
The kind of information that was needed was information which contextualised the
study area within its broader local and municipal context Pre-existing data
particularly demographic and statistical data on the hostel and its surroundings
Ekurhulenirsquos Integrated Development Plan the Metrorsquos Spatial Development
Framework and information that would give an overview of the geographic social
economic and possibly even the political context of the study area is needed
Moreover project reports studies memorandums or minutes and state policy on
hostel conversion would also be useful
173 Collecting data
In collecting data there were a number of methods and tools that were used which
involved moments of ad hoc discussion and deliberation around the topic What was
invigorating and always thrilling was peoplersquos interest and curiosity regarding this
study The impromptu encounter(s) with people who were open and ready to share
their point of views and experience(s) honestly made the data collection process
that much easier
There was a considerable amount of time spent on examining literature books
articles (both academic and media sources) sources on the internet and journals
Collecting data also involved examining similar programmes and projects on hostel
conversionredevelopment so collecting desktop data and consulting library sources
was an invaluable part of collecting data
174 Sampling
The study sample is important for any research The choice between qualitative
quantitative or even the consideration of using a mixed methods approach should
be determined by the research question and not decided subjectively In grappling
with the research question it seemed most appropriate for the purpose of this study to
make use of a qualitative approach It was believed that a qualitative approach
Page | 23
would provide the necessary framework to respond to the research question and
address the aim and objectives of the study In answering the lsquohowrsquo and lsquowhyrsquo
questions that the study would pose a qualitative approach would engage in a sort
of comprehensive exploration of the many-sided and possibly complex dynamics of
the Sethokga hostel conversion project For this reason a qualitative interview-
centred approach was used (Marshall 1996)
Marshall (1996) argues that there are three broad methods commonly used in
selecting a study sample that is convenience judgement and theoretical sampling
techniques Convenience sampling involves the most accessible person(s) it is the
least time consuming requires the least effort and financing Judgement sampling
also referred to as purposeful sampling is according to Marshall (1996) the most
widely used sampling technique With judgement sampling the researcher
purposefully and actively selects a sample that would best respond to their research
question and in principle convenience is set aside While theoretical sampling
involves a process of selection of a sample that is mainly driven by and rooted in a
theoretical position the sample is selected to examine or elaborate a particular
theory (Marshall 1996)
For the purpose of this study the judgemental sampling technique was used and this
entailed the active and purposeful selection of what Marshall refers to as lsquosubjectsrsquo
with particular expertise ie key informants The sample selection was based on my
prior experience and practical knowledge of the study area The limitation however
was that there were quite a number of elaborate and contentious issues at play
which within the limits of this study could not be explored at length on account of
time constraints and the particular focus of this study
175 Ethical considerations
As a young female scholar entering into a rather conflicted lsquotoughrsquo and culturally-
laden environment I was faced with what was an apparent concern for safety and
so on my trips to the hostel I was always accompanied by my father or a friend
Initially my intention was to interview some of the hostel residents but the sensitivities
around the harshness of their living conditions were highlighted as a possible area of
vulnerability and the spate of xenophobia attacks particularly in and around hostels
suggested reconsideration As a researcher I ensured that the participants were all
Page | 24
well aware and informed that their participation was voluntary and they were at
liberty to withdraw their involvement at any stage The interviewees were informed of
the choice to remain anonymous if they wished and that the information they shared
would be used to develop this research report Thus my ethical obligation as a
researcher was to ensure that I did minimal harm and unintentional damage through
my research that I conducted myself responsibly and professionally at all times and
that I reported accurately what I found including unforeseen and even negative
findings
18 Conclusion
Hostels consolidated the migrant labour system They served not only to control the
number of black labour residing in urban areas but also to manage its behaviour As
hostels were designed to be unattractive and uncomfortable many comparisons
have been made between hostels and institutions such as army barracks and prisons
There is a window of opportunity in promoting hostel conversion but injecting
resources into previously marginalised communities have resulted and is resulting in
conflict local power struggles and competition for those resources (Thurman 1997)
The next chapter will discuss the theoretical backdrop of this study and elaborate on
key concepts theories ideas and arguments that have been of particular relevance
to unpacking the research question
Page | 25
Theoretical backdrop
2 Introduction
It is imperative at this point to contextualise the term hostels so as to clearly il lustrate
what is meant by it This section of the report will contextualise the term hostels and it
will examine key concepts theories ideas and arguments that are of particular
relevance to the study
Furthermore chapter two argues that hostels have largely remained as urban
enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
It argues that the rigid structures of regulation and control that were imposed upon
the former inhabitants of hostels were essentially just one part of a multi-faceted and
disconcerting circumstance that has continued to live on within a large number of
hostels (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012) This view that hostels operated and in some
respect continue to operate under a complex set of circumstances is shared and
supported by the work of authors such as Segal (1991) Ramphele (1993) Goldblatt
and Meintjes(1996) Thurman (1997) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) Dyiki (2006) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) Subsequently some of their work will be used to
unpack the research question and draw on certain aspects that resonate with the
case study The following abridged abstract describes some of the complexities
around hostels and the views captured in the work of some of the authors mentioned
above
According to Segal (1991) hostel life and the regulations imposed upon hostel
dwellers made it extremely difficult to maintain family life that is men would leave
their families in the rural areas for long periods of time to find work in the city
Ramphele (1993) notes that the families of the men would then became reliant for
their survival upon the remittance of the men Mapetla (2005) makes a compelling
argument that suggests that within contemporary society men are traditionally
culturally and even spiritually still regarded as the head the protector and provider of
their families even as the lines delineating the roles of men and women within
contemporary society have become faint and more fluid Arguably hostels still exist
within a highly complex setting (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Page | 26
21 Contextualising hostels
Generally hostels were badly designed poorly built and many have been suffering
years of neglect (Thurman 1997) Hostels were primarily built to accommodate
African migrant workers for the containment of their labour over the duration of their
stay in what were demarcated as South Africarsquos white urban areas (Thurman 1997)
There are notably three types of hostels namely public sector private sector and
grey sector hostels (Ramphele 1993)
Public sector hostels are hostels that were built and managed by provincial or local
authorities and mainly accommodated workers across a range of sectors (Ramphele
1993) Private sector hostels were built by private sector enterprise to house private
sector labourers who would mainly be working in the factories and mines (Pienaar
and Crofton 2005) Grey sector hostels were built on public sector-owned land by the
private sector under some form of contractual agreement with a government
authority (provincial or local) but were largely managed and controlled by private
sector employers (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Public and grey sector hostels were
generally situated in the townships (Thurman 1997) However when they were
planned these hostels were generally located on the outskirts of the cities but with
increased urban growth they now relatively tend to be more centrally situated
(Thurman 1997)
Ramphele (1993) argued that each hostel had a distinct form and quality about it
Elements of tribalism certain customs systems of belief and association dimensions of
conflict and conflict resolution were not homogeneous across all hostels (Ramphele
1993) The type of work that the migrant labourers did across the sectors they worked
was often rudimentary It ranged from unskilled to very basic semi-skilled work and it
was quite labour intensive in return for meagre earnings (Ramphele 1993)
Historically hostels were characterised by two main geographic classifications firstly
hostels in the backdrop of an urban context (ie also referring to inner city hostels)
and secondly hostels in the areas around mines (Segal 1991) According to Segal
(1991) urban context hostels had a more diffused grouping of hostel dwellers than
their mining counterparts (Segal 1991) Hostels in urban context developed broader
and somewhat complex relations with the outside community This contrasted with
the extreme isolation of hostel dwellers in hostels around the mines Therefore hostels
in the urban context were to a lesser extent conceived to be lsquomore openrsquo and lsquoless
strictly controlledrsquo However both were essentially sites of control and exploitation
Page | 27
with clearly marked physical boundaries in form of high walls and fences with single
and restricted entry and exit points (Segal 1991)
Hostels in urban areas had government bureaucracies responsible for their
management and maintenance as opposed to a single employercompany (Segal
1991) Moreover hostels in the urban context accommodated a wider and more
diverse range of workers who did not necessarily work for the same
employercompany or have uniform working hours or shifts In urban hostels ethnicity
was not the official organiser of hostel dwellers as men from different backgrounds
and homelands would and could share rooms (Ramphele 1993) Lastly and perhaps
the most important distinguishing feature of the two was the fact that hostels in urban
areas were not under the extensive force of lsquototal controlrsquo as was the experience of
mining hostel dwellers (Segal 1991 Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
According to Pienaar and Crofton (2005) public sector hostels accommodated the
largest number of hostel dwellers Overall the quality of living environment of hostels
was generally poor but this was particularly bad in public sector hostels (Ramphele
1993) Additionally the administrative processes and management of public sector
hostels was under dire strain as no clear records of those that lived in the hostels or
those entering and exiting the hostel were kept (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that although private sector hostels were considered to be
better managed and maintained The general state of all hostels whether public or
privately owned was largely characterised by poor living conditions a lack of
privacy the sharing of very limited spaces a distressed local context and
overcrowded conditions (Ramphele 1993) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) further note
that around the early 1980s hostel residents simply started to withdraw from payment
of rentals and thus the maintenance of the hostels grew even thinner and steadily
non-existent Public sector hostels grew especially financially and politically
unmanageable (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
22 Key concepts theories ideas and arguments
To unpack the research question and contextualise the study within a broader
theoretical framework this section of the report will discuss and draw on a number of
concepts theories ideas and arguments
Page | 28
221 The historic model of hostels the conceptualisation of the hostel system
In grappling with the historic model of the hostel system this section of the report will
discuss two main themes The conceptualisation of the hostel system and migration
migrant labour as conceived under the hostel system It illustrates the effect hostels
have had on shaping the lives and experiences of their inhabitants in unique and
complex ways (Thurman 1997)
South Africa is a country marked by a legacy of systematic discrimination and the
deliberate disempowerment of a lsquocategoryrsquo of its population (Thurman 1997) Hostels
were established supported and perpetuated by methodical policy frameworks and
brute controls to discourage the permanent settlement of the in historically lsquowhite
areasrsquo (Segal 1991) Thurman (1997) argues that hostels occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are symbolic of three centuries of
systematic racial discrimination
Seemingly ignited by and originating in the mining industry in the nineteenth century
the construction of hostels reached a peak during the 1960s and 1970s in the period
that has been referred to as the ldquogrand apartheidrdquo years (Thurman 1997) They were
built as single-sex dormitory compounds to accommodate African migrant labourers
as sojourners in what were delineated as white urban areas (Ramphele 1993) In
hostels which were intended strictly for male migrant labourersrsquo job-seeking by
African women was criminalised and a deliberate policy not to provide family
housing was pursued (Ramphele 1993)
Common to hostels was the blurring and hostility of the boundaries between the
hostel dwellers place(s) of work and their living spaces (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) In
turn some authors have argued that hostels in some sense functioned as a lsquototal
institutionrsquo According to Segal (1991) and Ramphele (1993) geographically many
hostels were isolated and situated literally at the edges of urban areas and society in
general They were primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for
human comfort safety or enrichment (Thurman 1997) The heavy-handedness of the
hostel system imposed a cunning inferiority complex a sense of no escape yet quite
interestingly a later unwillingness and indifference to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have
their hostel converted into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Ramphele (1993) and Segal (1991) make a rather compelling argument and share
the view that the behaviour and conduct of some of the hostel dwellers against
Page | 29
having their hostel converted into family units is indicative of similar behaviour and
actions displayed by long-term prisoners and people contained in barracks They
argue that a substantial number of long-term inmates would in some instances
display great unwillingness and some difficulty to the prospect of re-entering society
after being socialised into a total institution a reformatory (Ramphele 1993 and
Segal 1991) According to a text by Statistics South Africa (2001) an institution can be
defined as a communal place of residence for persons with common characteristics
(Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001) One could then argue
that one of the common characteristics shared by many hostels was the migrant
labourer status attributed to them (Dyiki 2006)
222 Migration and the notion of migrant labour labourers as conceived under the hostel
system
Castles and Miller (2008) argues that all through time and space individuals and
families have been migrating and doing so for a number of reasons Universally the
migration lsquophenomenonrsquo was and has been as a result of varying factors and in
response to certain causes and events such as demographic growth environmental
changes development vs underdevelopment and the seeking of lsquobetterrsquo
opportunities (Castles and Miller 2008) Others have turned to migration to seek jobs
often located or perceived to be concentrated in larger urban centres (Collinson
and Adazu 2006 Castles and Miller 2008)
Migration can occur as a voluntary or forced process This study is particularly
interested in the event of migration that becomes forced migration when the
circumstances of individuals and families leave them little or no choice but to pursue
lsquohopersquo away from their native home-base (Castles and Miller 2008) Arguably this was
characteristic of the hostel model Hostels enabled mines and later other industries to
suppose and cause that hostel dwellers had homes in rural areas (Collinson 2006)
Seemingly the rural populace was the lsquodesiredrsquo workforce ushered into the city and
mines and exploited as labourers for the development of the urban-based economy
(Thurman 1997)
According to Thurman (1997) the residents of hostels were typically considered as
rural traditionalists and lsquodangerousrsquo outsiders by the residents of townships which
surrounded the hostel Their physical as well as social isolation meant that they often
retained strong links with their rural home-base (Segal 1991) This involved the
Page | 30
periodic movement of individual household members between the hostel and their
rural homes (Thurman 1997) The ruralurban linkages which were subsequently
fashioned became a distinguishing feature of not just hostel dwellers but the black
African populace and as a part of their experience of urban life (Collinson and
Adazu 2006) The costly urban world was thus considered by many as merely a place
of work (Segal 1991 and Ramphele 1993)
This type of migration - also often referred to as lsquocircularrsquo or lsquooscillatingrsquo migration -
became characteristic of a sort of temporary sentiment to life and living in the city
(Dyiki 2006) Additionally the events of circular migration presented certain
household dynamics and challenges in maintaining the often faint links between the
migrant and the households family left behind (Collionson 2006 Ramphele 1993)
Conceivably hostel dwellers have for a long time had a common rural orientation
(Segal 1991) ldquoIt has been repeatedly demonstrated that migrants do not leave
behind the countryside in their journey to the cityrdquo and this rural consciousness has
remained central to the migrant labour population (Segal 1991 9)
Within contemporary society the concept of lsquothe new economies of labour
migrationrsquo has emerged as an alternative position and argues that migration can be
and has become a household strategy (Collinson and Adazu 2006) According to
Collinson and Adazu (2006) within their analysis of contemporary migration patterns
migration has now largely become something that is purposefully chosen by
members of a household family This phenomenon involves the temporary migration
of some individuals within the household family in pursuit of opportunities towards
the collective betterment of the family household or even their broader community
(Collinson and Adazu 2006) Under this model of migration family and community
networks are considered to play an important and supporting role in facilitating
migration between urban-based and village-based households families (Collinson
and Adazu 2006) What is then required of the migrant is thatheshe reciprocate the
initial support offered by hisher household family community as received in hisher
rural-base (Collinson and Adazu 2006)
While in some respect migration is becoming a lsquolonged-forrsquo process and somewhat of
a deliberate choice on the other hand adverse circumstances force families
households to partake in this process as a means of survival (Collinson and Adazu
2006) The ability of migrants to maintain both an urban and rural residence in
whatever context ie historic or contemporary continues to present a social
geographic and economically complex state of affairs (Pienaar and Crofton (2005)
Page | 31
223 The notion of bedhold
The context of hostels designed to be uncomfortable and uninviting the closest
likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo was in the form of a bed Every aspect of life and
survival in hostels revolved around a bed (Ramphele 1993) According to Ramphele
(1993) this in turn perpetuated a circumstance of lsquoclientelismrsquo and blurred the lines of
patronage when it came to the exchanging of the membership of beds and when
beds were to be allocated or reallocated (Ramphele 1993) The ill-defined and fluid
relationship of patronage between bed-holders would in some respect function like
and resemble households (Ramphele 1993 Segal 1991 Mosoetsa 2011)
In some sense bed-holders assumed an intermediary role and served an informal
function as lsquolandlordsrsquo thus as proprietors of the bedhold (Ramphele 1993) Hostel
dwellers became lsquobed-holdersrsquo rather than lsquohouse-holdersrsquo in the urban space
(Segal 1991) It became unduly problematic that the bed was the only space over
which they could have any measure of control It after all distorted the perceptions
hostel dwellers developed of themselves in relation to their environment constraining
them to varying degrees (Ramphele 1993) Ramphele (1993) argues that the limits set
by physical space in hostels also defined in very clear terms the inside versus the
outside security versus insecurity family versus non-family and urban versus rural She
further argues that onersquos very identify in the hostel and their lsquolegal existencersquo in the
urban space depended on their attachment to a bed (Ramphele 1993) According
to Ramphele (1993) the bed acted as a sort of mediator thus lsquoa go-betweenrsquo the
hostel dwellers and the rest of society to which they remain somewhat disconnected
and possibly indifferent (Ramphele 1993)
224 The stigma of hostel life
The stigma of hostel life gave a rather conspicuous meaning to lsquoblack urban lifersquo and
their experience(s) of life in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were badly
designed poorly built and many suffer years of neglect (Thurman 1997) There have
been a number of authors who have argued that hostel dwellers suffered a great
injustice to their humanity their perception of self constrained relations with others
and a constant struggle to maintain family networks with their often rural-base
(Goldblatt and Mentjies 1996)
Page | 32
The living conditions in hostels have been expressed in basic terms as shocking
disgusting inhumane cruel and intolerable by both scholars and residents of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Hostel accommodation is undesirable both aesthetically and
conceptually and there are a number of common features which characterise most
hostels a lack of privacy overcrowded and poor living conditions very limited space
and a serious state of disrepair (Ramphele 1993) Failing to delineate private
personal space the purpose of hostels was to ensure a compliant labour force (Segal
1991)
According to Ramphele (1993) hostels represent physical space that is not only
limited but is also limiting Ramphele makes a distinction between the circumstance
and living arrangements of hostel dwellers and township residents Arguing that
although physical overcrowding of sleeping accommodation between the two
(hostel dwellers and township residents) many not be much different in terms of the
ratio of people to roomsbeds (Ramphele 1993) For township residents it is most likely
that they would be sharing these limited facilities with kin or friends rather than
complete strangers (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of hostels some men
women may adapt too well to living in single-sex hostels and would find change too
difficult to cope with (Ramphele 1993)
225 Family versus household configurations
The terms family and household are not necessarily synonymous According to the
Department of Social Development (2012) ldquoa household comprises of either (i) a
single person who makes provision(s) for hisher food or other essentials for living or (ii)
a group of at least two or more people living together who make common provision
for their food and other essentialsrdquo (White Paper on Families in South Africa 2012 11)
Moreover the Department notes that a household can contain a family yet the
members of the household are not always necessarily a family further remarking that
ldquoa household performs the functions of providing a place of dwelling and the sharing
of resources and these functions can be performed among people who are related
by blood or people without any such relationshiprdquo (White Paper on Families in South
Africa 2012 11) This distinction of family and household configurations is useful to this
study for two main reasons (a) as it has been suggested that one of the broad aims of
the hostel conversion approach is to introduce facilitate lsquofamily lifersquo and to inject a
family quality into these historically single-sex environments (b) Is it then supposed by
the Sethokga hostel conversion project that the household configurations in the
hostel are at present existing wholly in the absence of family configurations
Page | 33
It is important to be mindful of the fact that with time households have become
more complex and family structures more diffused (Mosoetsa 2011) Hostel dwellers
through years of living under space constraints and in single-sex accommodation
have developed certain ideologies practices and habits (Thurman 1997) Arguably
the hostel system redefined and reshaped family and household configurations and
constructed a complex social setting (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of male
occupied hostels relationships among men are characterised by hierarchy and
Ramphele (1993) notes that this is legitimised by lsquotraditionrsquo and is based on age
differences The older men are more likely to occupy positions of authority and be
regarded as the lsquoheadsrsquo of the household and in authority to organise the affairs of
the household Whereas the younger men would be cast in the role of attending to
duties considered lsquotypicalrsquo to women and that is the upkeep of the household ie
cleaning cooking In this lsquomanrsquos worldrsquo tradition and age regulate the day-to-day
function of the household (Ramphele 1993) The links between the men and the
families they had have left behind has arguably become increasingly scant and
incoherent (Grieger et al 2013) With the blurring of their lsquobindingrsquo reciprocal
obligations and support the conception of family life was redefined and put under
considerable strain as a result of migrant labour laws and the criminalisation of job-
seeking activity in urban areas of their rural wives partners (Segal 1991)
In both family and household configurations shared obligations and mutual support
takes many forms (Mapetla 2005) The family structure is perceived to be the
lsquocommander and regulator of the activities and conduct of the individual members
The family structure has been set apart from a household in that a household is more
of a residential unit where related andor none-related individuals in a sense lsquoeat
from the same potrsquo (Mosoetsa 2011) In some cases the individuals and members of
a household provide themselves jointly with food andor other essentials however a
household can also consist of a person who lives alone The distinguishing feature is
that a family configuration consists of people individuals who have a blood-kin
connection and this can include immediate and extended relatives but the same
does not necessarily always hold true for household configurations (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005 Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001)
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing
South Africa can still somewhat be regarded as a traditionally patrilineal society
where land and property are traced through the male lineage where upon marriage
Page | 34
a woman is required to leave her native home to reside with her husband at his home
(Mapetla 2005) This system has been more inclined to empower men (Ziehl 2001)
Subsequently within contemporary society and within the lsquonew politics of gender
relationsrsquo property and land ownership have since become a highly contentious
subject Therefore the issue of housing is quite a significant one and warrants some
reflection particularly the aspect of men and housing (Mapetla 2005)
Gender roles have steadily been changing and are increasingly becoming ill-defined
(Ziehl 2001) So how can or rather how should housing projects and interventions
such as hostel conversion projects be more gender sensitive inclusive representative
and reflective of the changing gender roles both in a social and spatial sense
Gender considerations regarding housing and housing projects need to be mindful of
the innate differentiation between men and women and their not always uniform
needs and interaction(s) with space (Mapetla 2005) The often male bias when it
comes to access to housing might just further be perpetuated through hostel
conversion projects The question here is then does this new conception of a
reconfigured living environment in the form of family units make provision(s) towards
addressing any of the housing-related gender biases What do these projects
consider important in terms of gender issues if at all how have these issues been
factored into the projects
Gender and housing related theory has often argued strongest the case of women in
their inability to access housing land the law and related funding (Ziehl 2001) The
issues of gender relations and access to housing have become increasingly topical
(Mosoetsa 2011) Womenrsquos rights access to the law resources and social amenities
have been areas which have gained a significant amount of traction in both policy
and academic circles owing to historically discriminatory laws (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005) However in South Africa and perhaps this is true for many other
societies traditionally culturally and even spiritually men are still to a significant extent
regarded as the head of household the foremost provider for their families (Mapetla
2005)
Within the context of hostels migrant labour laws which also made it a point that the
remuneration of its African labour workforce was as horrendous as the conditions they
lived in shaped a particular aspect of menrsquos relation to housing in the urban context
and their experiences (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In a study conducted by Segal
(1991) a group of men living in a hostel were interviewed to give their account of life
in the hostel According to Segal (1991) it became apparent that the men tolerated
the hostel because they felt humiliated by even the thought of losing their roles as the
Page | 35
provider for their family Some men suggested that they could and would not bring
their wives or children to the hostel for even a brief visit (Segal 1991) In their minds
they were better off alone in the citymine because the burden of their own survival
was already enormous (Segal 1991)
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy
Large sections of the South African state have continued to be institutionally
ineffective unsustainable and dysfunctional (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert 2011) Post-
1994 efforts towards nation-building and state formation in the country have taken
many forms a unitary state the inauguration of a new president of the Republic of
South Africa and the promulgation of the 1996 Constitution of the Republic(Barnet
1999) Furthermore the ideals of nation building and state formation would attempt
to diffuse into a sound and convergent form what was once opposite and adverse
(von Holdt 2010)
The housing deficit in the country was and has continued to be one of the greatest
challenges facing the government particularly the inadequate provision and access
to housing for the black majority who had been rendered destitute and occupying
dreadful accommodation (Thurman 1997) In what could better be regarded as
temporary disaster relief areas than housing suitable for any human to call lsquohomersquo
(Ramphele 1993) Post-apartheid bureaucratic inefficiency class formation
redundant budgetary rituals antagonistic attitudes towards public service vocation
and authority has greatly stifled service delivery imperatives ie social housing
provision (von Holdt 2010) Undoubtedly the role of policy towards addressing issues
such as housing and service delivery is a significant one (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert
2011) this will be discussed further in chapter four
228 The role and significance of community public participation in hostel conversion to
family unitrsquos projects
Public participation in any context is a complex and at times a contentious exercise
Academic literature on community public participation tends to presuppose an
experience or existence of informal unambiguous or authentic relations in
community participation processes (Mdunyelwa 2015) This particularly in housing
related projects and programmes with the assumption that if all the stakeholders
involved are consulted the process of participation is likely to yield positive results and
success (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) In South Africa the notion of public
Page | 36
community participation has gained popularity as a democratic practice essential
for development and nation-building (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their research project entitled ldquoA
Case Study of participation in the City Deep Hostel Redevelopmentrdquo suggests that
there are more complex and less diffused forces at play According to Benit-Gbaffou
and Mathoho (2010) the central question often becomes when and at what point
can one say people have effectively or meaningfully participated This question is
especially relevant and significance to hostel conversion projects and to efforts to re-
configure hostels as lsquofamily units suitable for family lifersquo (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010) According to state policy the hostel conversion redevelopment approach is
and has been a nation-wide intervention initiated by the post-1994 government to
redevelop convert hostels in efforts to de-stigmatise these historically-laden spaces
(Dyiki 2006) Moreover the current Minister of Human Settlement has of late stated
on a number of media platforms the hostel conversion approach also seeks to
rehabilitate these historically single-sex migrant labour compounds into family
apartmentsunits to promote a family-oriented setting (Sisulu 2015) According to a
2001 text by Statistics South Africa ldquoconverted or upgraded hostels should be treated
in the same way as a block of flats and each unit considered as a separate housing
unitrdquo (Statistics South Africa Census2001 3)
The importance and usefulness of public community participation in hostel
conversion projects have been a widely and overly debated topic However this
does not wholly take away from the fact that there are many and varied obstacles
and challenges when it comes to the actual practice and experience of
participation on the ground (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) Even while the political
and socio-economic contexts of every project are varied with different structures and
the coordination of stakeholders take on different forms (Mdunyelwa 2015) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) argue that participation has often become a political
process riddled in processes of negotiation and rampant differences of opinion
coupled with a mix of personal andor political ambitions (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010)
Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their study of the City Deep Hostel
Redevelopment Project outlined a number of issues which the project encountered
before during and after the hotel redevelopment project there included
Page | 37
Before the redevelopment process
Managing change while also trying to mitigate violence the unauthorised
occupation of tenants wanting to gain the benefits of the redevelopment project
and the allocation of units (as a contentious challenge) were cited as challenges
encountered before the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
During the process
Challenges around the design of the units (limitations and constraints with respect to
skills time and finances) the issue of labour the provision of public and social
facilities services (ie cregraveches play areas for the children) were cited as being
encountered during the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
Issues after the project
Tariff rates (with electricity as one of the biggest concerns) along with the
disagreement and discontentment around rental payments were cited as the
challenges which were encountered post the hostel redevelopment process A
central question and concern that arose focused on whether the hostel did not just
became a renovated workersrsquo hostel or if it actually did change into actual family
units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
With the study area for this research in mind I am left wondering if the issues identified
by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) are unique to the City Deep contextproject
or are they to some extent representative and reverberate to the broader
challenges and limitations of hostel conversion projects across the country Certainly
there is some value to participation when it comes to hostel conversion
redevelopment but the process of participation particularly within the context of
hostels as politically and socio-economically volatile environments will most likely be
confronted by sturdy issues of inherent sensitivities and nuances (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010) This is what Mdunyelwa (2015) decisively refers to as binary cultural
political and social structures alluding to the sentiment that some hostel dwellers are
in some respect men and women of two minds set free from the physical shackles of
oppression yet still sadly unable and ill-equipped to live and transform their thinking
well beyond that (Mdunyelwa 2015)
Page | 38
23 Conclusion
Typically the body of work that exists on hostels is unambiguously and largely
concentrated on the historically-laden context of hostels It especially articulates
issues of violent conflict and tension within hostels and their surrounding areas
Conflict situations are often captioned as hostel versus township lsquowarsrsquo There is an
important political backdrop to this which relates to the rural urban links made
mention of in this chapter
Furthermore the poor living conditions of hostels the inadequate provision of services
and social amenities should be considered The loss of family life and the sense that
hostels pose as limited spaces which is a negative reflection on to dignity of its
inhabitants are some of elements associated with the stigma of hostel life (Bonner
and Nieftagodien 2012 Ramphele 1993) This has to quite a significant extent
remained a present-day and associated reality of the hostel setting and has posed
vast challenges to hostel conversion redevelopment projects
This chapter has argued that the landscape of hostels has by and large remained
complex at times perplexing and highly contentious As a resultant the wicked
consequences of the hostel system have been many and varied but all of which
warrant due attention The theoretical backdrop on hostels has been useful in
developing themes that resonate with the case study Sethokga hostel Of particular
relevance to the case study will be role and significance of community public
participation in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Highlighting some of the
issues encountered before and during the project as the project has not yet been
completed Certain aspects of the discussion on key concepts theories arguments
and ideas and how they resonate with the case study will be explored further
Particularly the notion of bedhold the aspect of men and housing the stigma of
hostel life and the resultant consequences of the hostel system will be critically
discussed in chapter five which examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project
Page | 39
Introducing Sethokga hostel
3 Introduction
In addition to the study area this chapter will in greater detail describe and locate
Sethokga hostel It examines its local as well as municipal context and presents a
visual narrative of the hostel The aim of the visual narrative is to provide the reader
with a lsquosensersquo of the physical setting of the hostel thus to provide the reader with a
visual depiction of the multifaceted circumstance of the hostel and the complex
challenges in which its residents endure Chapter three largely seeks to provide the
reader with an impression of the context in which the Sethokga hostel conversion
project is taking place
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)
In the period between 1890 and the late 1920s Ekurhuleni (at the time referred to as
the East Rand region of the Transvaal Province) experienced increased numbers of
black male workersmigrants This was as a result of a surge in the gold mining sector
which took place on the Witwatersrand gold reefs (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
According to Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) of the 15 000 workers that were
employed in the sector some 5 000 worked in what is now called the Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality With time the number of workers in the Ekurhuleni area
continued to rise considerably most of who were oscillating migrants who were either
accommodated in labour compounds such as hostels or shanty settlements in
townships across Ekurhuleni such as Tembisa Duduza Tsakane Kwa-Thema and so
forth (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) also argue that for most of the period of the
booming mining sector in the Witwatersrand reef to well into the countryrsquos
democratic dispensation political contention in hostels had long been a common
feature throughout the region As a consequence hostels and a number of the
townships in Ekurhuleni have somewhat continued to exist within a circumstance of
deep-seated antagonistic political and socio-economic conditions (Bonner and
Nieftagodien 2012)
Sethokga hostel is one of the largest hostels in the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan region
according to the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis Study in 2014 there
Page | 40
were approximately 12 120 residents living in the hostel (Demacon 2014) Of that
roughly 4 000 have since the beginning of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
been relocated or reallocated within other blocks in the hostel to make way for the
construction of the family units (Demacon 2014) Some of the relocations of residents
have been to alternative sites outside the hostel to either Enhlanzeni hostel or
Vusimuzi hostel both situated in the Tembisa area (Demacon 2014)Interestingly
Enhlanzeni as well as Vusimizi hostels are also experiencing issues of overcrowding
poor living conditions and similar socio-economic conditions to Sethokga Moreover
neither Enhlanzeni nor Vusimuzi hostel have or are undergoing upgrading
conversion It was not clear in the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis
Study what the reasons for relocating the residents of Sethokga to these hostels were
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni hostel and
Vusimuzi hostel
Source Demacon 2014
Page | 41
311 Geographic description of the study
Sethokga hostel was built in 1980 and much like other hostels across the country the
Sethokga hostel was badly designed poorly built and has been suffering years of
neglect Sethokga hostel is a public sector type hostel and is owned by the
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Sethokga was built to accommodate male
migrant labourers from a range of industries (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Similar to
numerous other hostels men could live in the hostel so long as they had work in
industries but wives partners and families were prohibited from residence (Thurman
1997) They were entitled only to short-term visiting permits Regular and violent raids
which were carried out by authorities during the day and at night would rigorously
enforce these regulations to chase away arrest or bus back the wives partners and
families of the men back to the homelands (Thurman 1997)
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi initially the hostel
accommodated a lsquomixturersquo of residents black men across all tribes and ethnicities
but he recalls the change that occurred in the 1990s in response to political shifts He
recalls that ldquoafter the release of Mandela and when they started preaching lsquothis
thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions happened according to who was Zulu or
Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Below the ward
councillor explains what he saw as some of the factors that led to what is currently
the strong predominance of Pedi and Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel
suggesting that ldquoThere were mixed feeling when talks were rife concerning
negotiations that could lead to possible elections because the IFP (Inkatha Freedom
Party) was rejecting such a notion At the time it was a situation of the Zulursquos terrorizing
the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa and standing with the white man The
Zulursquos did not like such an idea which caused a divide among the Zulu and Xhosa
This led to conflict between the Xhosa and the Zulu There was fighting everywhere in
the country and you found some Pedis Venda and Tsongarsquos ran away from certain
hostels because they were being chased out and some landed up in Sethokga (
Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) The points made by Cllr Mohlapamaswi flag some
interesting points for instance that this hostel in some respect played the role of a
place of refuge and might affect how residents view it
Sethokga hostel is situated on approximately 22 hectares of land and consists of 29 U-
shaped single and two storey dormitories but mainly consists of the two storey walk-up
dormitories (Demacon 2014) The hostel lies on medium dolomitic soil despite this it
has been said and reported that over the years this has not had a significant impact
Page | 42
on much of the structural qualities of the hostel (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) The
structural sturdiness of the hostel is said to have been mitigated through precautions
such as drainage and the assembly of lsquowellrsquo positioned pavements (Demacon 2014)
According to the ward councillor there are a few women and children living in the
hostel although it is not quite clear how many They are however not recognised as
lsquolegitimatersquo residence of Sethokga (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Arguably a
number of the hostel redevelopment conversion projects that have taken place
across the country have been as a response to the prevailing presence of women
and children who had come to live in the hostel The fact that this hostel has
remained predominantly male occupied presents a number contextual dimensions
to the hostel conversion project This will be explored in chapter five which will
examine the conceptualisation of the hostel conversion project
According to Thurman (1997) it is not uncommon in hostels for up to three families to
live in one room measuring 20 square metres Such rooms were designed to
accommodate two to three workers or even up to twenty people to share a sink a
shower and toilet (Thurman 1997) Yet lsquowholersquo families ie husbands wives children
or extended families have not moved into Sethokga Overcrowding remains a
concern and privacy is scarce in the hostel (Demacon 2014) The dormitories have
very limited physical space and little room for manoeuvre The typical floor plan of a
hostel is provided on the next page and depicts the rigid rudimentary and restrained
design of the hostel compound Sethokga hostel has identical floor plans and
elevations
Page | 43
Floor plan of a typical dormitory compound
Source Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
Figure 1 Ground Floor Plan
Figure 2 First Floor Plan
Figure 3 Elevation
Page | 44
312 Locality
The hostel is situated in the East Rand region of the Gauteng province within the
municipal administrative jurisdiction of the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (EMM)
in the Kempton Park ndash Tembisa Customer Care Area It is located in the north-eastern
region region B of the EMM in the township of Tembisa and lies to the south of the
Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and to the east of the City of Johannesburg
Moreover the hostel is lies between the Kempton Park Pretoria railway link near
Oakmoor station thus a multipurpose and inter-as well as intra-regional public
transport node It is well serviced in terms of public transport and easily accessible
from the R21 (Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
Map 2 Locality map
Source Google maps 2015
Source EkurhuleniGIS 2015
Page | 45
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex
313 Local and municipal context
Tembisa is one of the largest townships in the metro and it is situated in region A of the
EMM towards the north-western end of the municipality The hostel lies in ward four of
the metro to the east of Midrand and to the west of one of the most affluent suburbs
in region A Glen Marais along with other high income areas such as Serengeti Golf
Estate Midstream and the suburb of Edenvale (Demacon 2014)
The Integrated Development Plan (IDP) for the Oakmoor area Area 19 of the metrorsquos
Local Integrated Development Plan (LIDP) was last prepared in 2000 The report
contained among its leading aims to establish an integrated framework to guide and
facilitate development interventions in the area (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000) It was documented in the report that the SDP would guide the
Page | 46
municipalityrsquos decisions in the development and management of the area in a way
that the report articulates as follows by encouraging and setting the framework for
private sector investment and initiatives and by seeking to strengthen economic
activity in the area through the identification of specific projects and programmes
which would kick-start development and lastly working towards improving service
delivery (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) The report reviews the
historically context of the area and argues that basically no provision was made for
service delivery or the adequate management of land and no consideration of land
use imperatives was given This was the case throughout the Tembisa Township (SJN
Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Furthermore the report established that the general land-use pattern across most of
the township was mainly comprised of residential developments It was in this 2000
Integrated Development Plan that it was overtly and in retrospect alluded to that
Tembisa had been established to function at that time as a dormitory settlement for
the neighbouring economic centres of the East Rand region such as Kempton Park
Olifantsfontein and Midrand (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
An abstract in 2000 SDF report(SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000 stated
the following that investigations had confirmed that the Sethokga hostel buildings
were structurally sound except for some weather proofing of external walls and basic
finishes to walls floors and ceiling Some repair work to cracks and precautions to pre-
empt future cracking may be necessary but the hostel blocks would offer little
difficulty in terms of conversion into single and family units According to the report
there seemed to be more problems with engineering services For example the
internal sewer reticulation was said to be so dilapidated that it may have needed to
be replaced entirely Parts of the water supply network would need to be replaced
fire hydrants installed electricity supply upgraded and grading of roads and storm-
water disposal required substantial attention (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
When the completed report was presented in 2000 it set out a case that the
municipality was currently negotiating with a non-profit organisation to acquire hostel
land and convert the hostel buildings into single and family units and manage such
housing stock (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) It further documented
that the lsquoultimatersquo number of dwelling units would be about 1200 with the first phase
of development to deliver 500 units The report suggested that the development
would be undertaken by an external organisation and that few planning guidelines
Page | 47
would need to be proposed to harmonize Sethokga hostel residential complex with
the rest of the Tembisa Township In the report it is assumed that the hostel conversion
would should result in a lsquosecurity complexrsquo type of housing development and
access to the complex would be gained mainly from local distributors such as the
extension of MbizaIzimbongi Street and Nyarhi Street (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000)
The report argued for change in the household profile of the hostel and this would
result in an increased demand for additional social facilities such as schools cregraveches
churches libraries play area(s) etc It was found in the report that space intensive (in
terms of size) social facilities eg cregraveches and a multipurpose centre should be
encouraged within the complex (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Additionally limited retail specifically corner shops should be established within the
complex Lastly the report suggested that it was important to align the services in the
area with the rest of the EMM and ensure adequate capacity at points where the
services connected into the hostel Roads in particular were highlighted as important
in this regard to ensure continuity and appropriate distribution of traffic movement
What is more the report states that traffic should be discouraged within the new
settlement (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
The SDF marked the entire Sethokga hostel complex as lsquohostel upgradingrsquo married to
public open space within the vicinity of the complex churches sports fields and
mixed use areas were proposed in the SDF (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
Page | 48
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework (SDF) 2000
The development proposals in the 2000 Oakmoor area19 SDF proposed that Sethokga hostel be
Redeveloped into family units The SDF also proposed mixed use nodal developments within and around
the Oakmoor area and proposed additional facilities such as cregraveches schools and recreational
facilities in certain areas
Source SJN Development Planning Consultants Planning Area 19 Oakmoor Development
Plan Development Proposals Final Report 2000
This SDF for the area is quite old and has not been updated
since this 2000 plan
Sethokga
hostel
Page | 49
There are 22 hostels across Ekurhuleni which are spread across six regions in the metro
(Demacon 2014) Region A has two hostels of which one is government owned
region B has three hostels of which government owns two regions C D and E hosts
one hostel respectively while region F has sixteen hostels (it is not clear how many are
owned by government) (Demacon 2014)
In terms of social facilities and amenities the study area is situated within a 3km radius
from two schools Rabasotho Combined School and Philena Middle School It is also
within a 2km radius from a healthcare facility - Esselen Park Satellite Clinic - and within
a 1km radius from a sporting facility - Esselen Park Sports School of Excellence
(Demacon 2014) The nearest police station is roughly 6km away and a lsquogenerousrsquo
number of shopping as well as entertainment centres are found within a 15 to 20km
radius of the hostel The nearest taxi route is less than 100m with the nearest train
stations including the Tembisa Limindlela and Kaalfontein stations all falling within a
10km radius (Demacon 2014)
In 2013 the Tembisa economy contributed 83 to the overall economy of the EMM
whilst Ekurhuleni contributed 253 to the overall economy of the Gauteng province
in 2013 (Demacon 2014) Sethokga hostel forms part of the Kempton Park Tembisa
precinct and according the Sethokga Hostels Mixed Typology Market Analysis Report
it falls within the development context of the Kempton Park Tembisa precinct It hosts
a range of housing typologies supported under various housing programmes
(Demacon 2014) which include but are not limited to Informal Settlement Upgrading
programmes and projects Integrated Residential Development Programmes(s) and
Gap Market Housing Units According to this report there also exists several
opportunities for the development of medium to higher density residential
developments (Demacon 2014) The EMMs 2010 Metropolitan Spatial Development
Framework suggests that among the several intentions of the metro the EMM will seek
to expand the affordable housing market and that it will seek to accommodate a
wider range of the metrorsquos populace by making a range of housing options available
for people across different income groupings (Demacon 2014)
This next section exhibits the lsquoambiencersquo of Sethokga hostel as it currently stands It
delves into some detail regarding the current setting of the hostel and takes the
reader through the authorrsquos experience being in the hostel and lsquotravellingrsquo through its
narrow corridors It shares my experience of going into this dauntingly male
dominated environment riddled with metaphorical tones of disempowerment
despondency and neglect All the images displayed here were taken by the author
Page | 50
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel
In terms of its infrastructure the hostel is said to still be somewhat structurally sound
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005) Aesthetically however it appears quite old and rundown
and leaves a lot to be desired The neglected state of refuse and rubble removal
adds to the wear and tear appearance of the hostel Each of the blocks that make-
up the hostel consists of separate dormitories and entry into each dormitory is gained
through a common access point - a door - that leads into a communal area with a
basic cooking and dining area There are no ceilings in any of the dormitories The
paint-work both inside and outside has long worn out In general the hostel appears
especially dull and unsightly
321 Built form architecture
Figure 4
The hostel is old and run-down
The adjoining hostel blocks are lined with a
number of lsquoinformalrsquo traders
This area that leads into one of the hostel
blocks is where a resident displays his goods
for selling
Page | 51
A number of the men have cars which they
park in their respective blocks
Walk-up that leads into one of the dorms
that is later photographed and shows the
condition of the interior of the hostel
The hostel is in an obvious state of neglect
and refuse removal is ignored
I spotted a number of chickens roaming about
in the hostel and a small vegetable garden
near one of the entrances into a dorm
There is one entry and exit point into most of
the blocks in the hostel
Page | 52
Figure 5
This is a communal cooking area It was said
that because the stove is so old and has a
number of issues the electricity powering the
stove is never turned off and so it runs
constantly through the day and night time
The area next to the cooking area is where
groceries and other goods are stored for
safe-keeping
This communal dining area also leads into
the rest of the dorm and the place where the
hostel dwellers sleep
None of the dorms have ceilings or any
added furnishings (ie lighting) The hostel
has never been re-painted or renovated
since it was built in the early 1980s
Page | 53
This corridor leads into the bedrooms where
the men sleep Sheets andor curtains lead to
what felt like very restricted distressing and
unpleasent living quarters
The compartments offer very limited room to
move around and offer little privacy There
are two beds per compartment with up to
three people sharing a bed The living
conditions are as what Ramphele (1993)
described as constraining to varying degrees
since it is a physically restricted environment
with blurred boundaries of personal private
space The physical proximity to others offers
practically no prospect for privacy or liberty
to accommodate visitors
Page | 54
Figure 6
322 Municipal amenities
Male urinal
Communal toilet
Communal shower
Most of the hostel blocks in the hostel have
electricity yet it seems to be offered for
free
The entrance (door) leading to the one
communal shower and toilet facility There is
one bathroom per dorm
Page | 55
Figure 7
323 The adjoining area
Most of the blocks in the hostels have
communal indoor as well as outdoor taps
with running water provided without
charge
lsquoInformalrsquo activity trade takes place in
and around the hostel
The council offices are situated adjacent to
one of the hostel blocks across the street
The municipality does not collect refuse in
the hostel so it is up to the hostel residents to
dispose of their refuse (it was not clear why
the municipality did not collect refuse in the
hostel)
Page | 56
According to the (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) entry and access to the hostel are
determined by ones ability to negotiate for a bed Much like what was described by
Ramphele (1993) the closest likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo in hostels was in the form
of a bed this persists at Sethokga To some extent every aspect of life and survival in
Sethokga revolves around a bed
One gains entry into Sethokga through a block chairperson (Sololo interview 2015)
Some of the functions and responsibilities of these block chairpersonrsquos is to know what
is happening in that particular hostel block The illustration given by the economic
representative for the ward Mr Sololo was that
ldquoWhatever which has been happening in a particular block the chairperson
should be aware of it and should call a meeting Letrsquos say if you are sitting in a
block here and you have got a jukebox and you find that you are selling
liquor and now they tell you that by 10 orsquoclock you close down and the music
should be off Then you do not comply with that the block chairperson will
report you to the hostel committee and they will sit and come up with a fine
for you if you do not listen even after they fine you they will chase you out of
the hostelrdquo
According to Sololo interview (2015) the block chairpersons maintain peace and
order and need to ensure that any conflict is mediated They are elected by the
residents of a given block and are entrusted with their grievances Ideally they should
be first point of contact before anything is to be escalated to the ward councillor ie
if a pipe bursts and they are without water This would need to be reported to the
EMM by either the block chairperson and if the problem remains unresolved it is then
escalated to the ward councillor (Sololo interview 2015)
33 Conclusion
Chapter three has explored a number of elements which model the status quo of the
study field Ironically the conditions in the hostel are not much different to many of
the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg Sethokga hostel also resembles
many other hostels across the country The hostel is overcrowded there is little room
to manoeuvre and there is an obvious lack of privacy The hostel is a possible health
hazard to those who live in it
Page | 57
This chapter shared some of my own experience of the hostel My experience consisted out
of being in the hostel taking photographs in and around the hostel and engaging with the
living environment Inside the hostel I was engulfed by its narrow poorly lit and what felt like
stifling corridors Corridors divided by curtains and sheets led into what were very confined
sleeping compartments Beds offer a place of rest for those who have voluntarily or
involuntarily sought refuge in the hostel Many after all consider the hostels as a lsquobetterrsquo
alternative to homelessness The experience for me was unlike any I have ever felt since the
circumstance of my life has provided a certain comfort that was surely challenged in the
modest time that I spent at Sethokga Chapter four examines what has been the states
approach to hostel conversion
Page | 58
The statesrsquo approach to hostel conversion
4 Introduction
The discussion in this chapter will reflect and review South African state policy post-1994
that concerns hostels Chapter four will also critically discuss and describe the
fundamentals of what have been considered two of the leading approaches to hostel
redevelopment conversion namely the Hostel Redevelopment Programmes (HRP) and
the Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach
There have been a number of state interventions post-1994 that have seemingly been a
lsquosignrsquo of governments lsquodesirersquo to improve the living conditions of not just hostel residents
but of a vast majority of South Africanrsquos who were subjected to poor living conditions
(Thurman 1997) However for the purpose of this study there will be particular focus on
interventions around hostels In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005) concur with a few
other authors that during post democracy the South African government introduced
along with other housing programmes a hostel upgrading conversion programme
aimed primarily at converting hostels into integrated family-oriented developments
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
South Africarsquos housing policy was launched in 1994 and the housing subsidy scheme
promised to deliver one million houses in five years (UrbanLankMark 2011) This would be
delivered through a range of subsidy mechanisms (UrbanLankMark 2011) According to
Dyiki interview(2015) in 1995 or about 1996 a National Hostel Redevelopment Policy was
approved and was among one of the primary national housing programmes (Dyiki
interview 2015) To facilitate nation-building and effective state formation it was believed
that social programmes such as state funded housing programmes would play a pivotal
role in this regard (Netshitenzhe 2011) Moreover the nation-building agenda saw the
government set the country bold and far-reaching goals and these somewhat became
associated with certain policies ideologies and norms (Netshitenzhe 2011) However
redundant budgetary rituals inadequate feasibility studies weak project evaluation
bureaucratic inefficiency managing community expectations and political interference
have been some of the issues that have held back progress (von Holdt 2010 and
Pienaar 2010) As a result housing provided by government has often been poorly
Page | 59
located and in some respect it has continued to perpetuate a reality of spatial
segregation (Charlton et al 2014)
This next section will describe how the hostel conversion approach has been articulated
through state policy through subsequent grants and schemes
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach
Through the provision of grants and schemes government has made efforts to provide
funding for the redevelopment conversion of hostels However there has been
somewhat of a bias on public sector hostels as the grants are provided mainly for the
redevelopment conversion of hostels owned by municipalities or provincial government
(Department of Human Settlements 2015) In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
provide a synopsis of some of governmentsrsquo earliest approaches to addressing lsquothe hostel
issuersquo (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) This is summarised as follows
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Peoples Housing Process
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme (this will be discussed in
section 42)
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Arguably the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units
Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of state efforts to grapple with the vast
challenges around hostels hostel life and the social ills that have become endemic to
hostels (Dyiki 2006) The essence of the approaches listed below was that hostels would
be redeveloped converted to create sustainable human living conditions To re-
integrated these hostel communities into the surrounding township communities (Pienaar
and Cloete 2005)
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership was premised on
the notion that Developers this could also include the municipality would be able to
submit project proposals for the development of housing on stands that were serviced for
people who qualified in terms of eligibility criteria eg a combined household income of
Page | 60
the beneficiary versus the available subsidy amount provided by the state Households
would then be required to contribute to the development (that is the construction of their
house) from their own savings or through what was referred to as lsquosweet equityrsquo
(providing their own material and labour) Locational and geographic factors would also
affect the amount of the subsidy by 2005 Pienaar and Cloete (2005) noted that this
subsidy had delivered an approximate 13 million homes which were primarily low-cost
free-standing
In the case of hostels redevelopment one option was that the subsidy could be used to
build new free-standing dwellings for individual full title ownership on unused portions of
land within hostel complexes This option would require sub-division of the land as well as
the installation of additional service Under the provisions of the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme another option would be to convert existing dormitories into family
apartments that could be sold off to beneficiaries under sectional title This sectional title
is a form of ownership where an individual holds title to a dwelling unit it can be a free-
standing unit or part of a multi-unit storey building The individual owns title together
with all the other owners of sectional dwellings on that property an undivided share of the
land on which the dwellings are built (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) However the challenge
was that where existing dormitories were converted and sold under title the projects
would be exposed to a host of problems that sectional title properties generally
encountered in low-income areas in the private sector ie poor management and
maintenance and difficulties in collecting levies and service debts (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process
The Peoplersquos Housing Process was reportedly introduced to enable communities
particularly those in disadvantaged areas to participate in the provision of their own
housing without the participation interference or involvement of private developers
However technical and administrative support and consultation would be offered by
Housing Support Organisations which were approved to serve this function (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005) What were termed as facilitation grants would be made available by the
government to lsquokick-startrsquo the housing projects The beneficiaries could apply for a grant
to pay for the services rendered by the Housing Support Organisation(s) and the housing
subsidy would be the same as for what was contained in the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) hostel residents could as a
community collective make use of this avenue as a means of obtaining ownership of an
improved residence with the assistance of their local authority a non-governmental
Page | 61
organisation (NGO) or perhaps a cluster of professions who could provide support and
administrative assistance as their Housing Support Organisation (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing was introduced in 1995 and was essentially a
variant of the project-linked subsidy provided to non-profit institutions independent of
government and registered as legally approved entities Households earning less than
R3500 per month would be provided through this subsidy with subsidised rental housing
by these entities In 1995 when the subsidy was introduced it carried a once-off capital
grant of R16 000 per dwelling but by 2002 the amount had increased to R27 000 as part of
the governmentrsquos aspiration to promote medium density housing Pienaar and Cloete
(2005) note that because the hostel redevelopment programme had been in limbo for
several years at the time of their study the Institutional Subsidy approach had been
considered as a viable alternative to accelerate hostel conversion projects The tenure
options under this subsidy it was proposed would include
Rental
Co-operative ownership
An instalment sale option in the form of a lsquorent to buyrsquo practice with a
minimum rental period of four years to qualify for the conversion to ownership
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Under the National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
the National Housing Code (for subsidised housing) delineates subsidised housing as
Permanent residential structures that have security of tenure both internal
and external privacy
Housing that has portable water serviced with adequate energy and sanitary
facilities
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing were set
to give effect to the objectives of the Housing Act 1997 which came into effect on 1 April
Page | 62
1998 To ensure quality and durable housing products that complied with particular
minimum standards (National Housing Report 2009) For instance dwellings had to have
a minimum gross floor area of 30m2 but this has since been amended (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005)
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country
Some international interest has been generated to consider intervention in hostels and
efforts to redevelopingconverting hostels The point of this section is to illustrate that
hostels occupied and in some respect have continued to occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are one of many representations of
the physical manifestation of three centuries of systematic racial discrimination and
economic exploitation (Thurman 1997) The consolidation of the migrant labour system
through hostels the poor living conditions of hostels the dishonour of hostel life and the
control they exert on the African populace Saw hostels gaining the attention of a
number of international agencies and authorities who put resources towards and took an
interest in reconfiguring the disposition of hostels (Dyiki interview 2015)
In the period between August 2002 and April 2003 the USAID (United States Agency for
International Development) extended its support to community based approaches to
housing in South Africa and in turn created a platform where it would have input(s) into
South Africarsquos national housing policy (Urban Sector Network 2003)
Hostel redevelopment was supported under a grant provision provided by the USAID this
had two main objectives The first was that policy and information dissemination should
serve as key objectives and secondly that USAID would have a voice in the facilitation of
hostel redevelopments Initially the grant was meant to run from 23 August 2000 to 30
August 2002 but an extension was requested and the grant extended for the period 1
September 2002 to 30 April 2003 (Urban Sector Network 2003) Additionally the on-goings
of the programme instituted under the grant were to include the following activities
Identifying and conducting research into tenure options and feasible
management models for hostels
Identifying possible needs and challenges and to then conduct nation-wide
research in the hostel sector
Facilitating workshops and consolidating policy submissions and to submit
research papers to the Department of Housing
Page | 63
To publish research papers
To conduct mid-term and final evaluation of the programme
Conducting information outreaches where the USN (Urban Sector Network) would
play an essential role in informing government the private sector as well as
communities about the opportunities which could be created through the
redevelopment of hostels (Urban Sector Network2003)
The Urban Sector Network (USN) then proceeded to make specific recommendations on
the hostel redevelopment approach The USN called for the broadening on the scope of
the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme to include all hostels (private and
grey sector) and not just public sector hostel Recommendations were made that the
norms and standards for the redeveloped hostels should be developed along with
national guidelines for the management of redeveloped hostels by local authorities They
advocated for stronger support for co-operative housing The redevelopment of hostels
to be approached in an integrated and holistic manner and hostels should not be
redeveloped in an isolated manner The subsidy amount for hostels redevelopment and
social facilitation needed to be increased Lastly that hostels redevelopment should
support livelihood strategies and capacity building and training of hostel residents during
the redevelopment process was essential (Urban Sector Network 2003)
The USN proposed a departure from the public sector hostel redevelopment bias of the
Hostel Redevelopment plan (Urban Sector Network 2003)
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme (HRP)
In principal the Hostel Redevelopment Programme supported an unambiguous bias in
favour of public sector hostels (Dyiki 2006) Public sector hostels are those hostels
owned by either provincial or local authorities that offered accommodation to workers
from a range of industries (Thurman 1997) Grey sector hostels (in which the structures
wereare owned by private companies but the land by a provincial or local authority
and private sector hostels) did not form part of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme
(Dyiki 2006) The biggest limitation and challenge of the HRP was in its narrow focus on
solely the conversion of hostels beds (Thurman 1997) The aim of the HRP was to provide
a subsidy allocation that was based per bed but it was criticised as being impractical
and unfeasible and not adequately addressing the issue of housing provision (Dyiki
2006) Dyiki interview (2015) believes that the challenge of the HRP was that it was not
talking to individuals but rather it was a subsidy given to the state to improve the hostel
and the standard of living in the hostel Since most of the public sector hostels were
Page | 64
managed by the municipalities the municipalities received the subsidy and the
residents of the hostels therefore had very little say in how the subsidy could in effect be
used The other challenge was that grey sector and public sector hostels were not part
of the subsidy (Dyiki interview 2015)
The Hostel Redevelopment Programme was perhaps the earliest strategy conceived by
the South African government as a national policy aiming to
Promote habitable and humane conditions in hostel conversions
Ensure the involvement of hostel residents the surroundingneighbouring
community and relevant (publicprivate) authorities and any other entity
affected by the project are involved in the decision-making processes
Facilitate and promote social integration within hostel communities and the
hostels and adjacent communities
Put measures in place to accommodate any persons displaced by the hostel
conversion project
Empower promote economic development and seeks to be development-
oriented
According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment
Programme was largely based on the premise that this programme would make some
provisions for grant funding from the central government towards the conversion or
upgrading of hostels particularly public sector or grey-sector hostels This will be done with
the broad aim of the programme to facilitate and create living conditions for residents
that are humane and hygienic by providing prospects for housing options that are
affordable and sustainable With tenure options for
Rental
Possible ownership for those at the lower income scale
Upon its conception a capital subsidy of R16 000 was initially proposed per family or R4
000 per individual Additionally to be eligible for this programme hostel redevelopment
programmes would need to be
Planned and implemented in a participative and comprehensive manner
with the requirement that interest groups would need to be established
Based on socio-economic studies undertaken to determine and consider the
needs and affordability aspect of those who would be affected (ie stand to
benefit from the project)
Page | 65
Unfailing in ensuring that there is no displacement of residents unless
alternative accommodation is provided
Sustainable with regards to the on-going payments of maintenance and any
other related costs
Purposeful to augment employment opportunities for the hostel residents as
well as the locals in the construction and on-going maintenance of the
project
The broad aim of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme (Mdunyelwa 2015) was to
convert these historically male-occupied spaces which were also subsequently meant
for migrant labourers to family units But it will be done in such a way to able and
capacitate the accommodation of the families of these men In some way but perhaps
not explicitly stated in the Hostel Redevelopment Programme policy brief there is an
element of urbanisation that is implied Therefore it was an attempt to somewhat
encourage the men to relocate their families from their rural home-base (Mdunyelwa
2015)
The shortcomings of the HRP in how it had a restricted focus on hostel beds and
somewhat of an oversight on the complexity of the configuration of hostels saw it being
replaced by the Community Residential Units Programme (CRU) (Pienaar 2010) Dyiki
interview (2015) in my interview with him argued that the CRU Programme unlike the HRP
contains a lot more detail that was perhaps missed in the HRP He further suggested that
the CRU Programme could be considered somewhat of a lsquocost recoveryrsquo strategy by
government to recoup some of the monies spent on these projects As the CRU
programme has a strong rental housing stock component to it (Dyiki interview 2015)
44 The Community Residential Units Programme (CRU Programme)
The Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme has since replaced the National
Hostel Redevelopment Programme At the time of this study there are approximately
2000 public hostels across the country with a vast majority of them still needing to be
afforded some attention and measures to redevelop them (Demacon 2014) According
to the Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the CRU Programme (2006)
the CRU Programme aims to facilitate the provision of secure and stable rental tenure for
lower income persons Furthermore stating that the programme seeks to provide a
framework for addressing the many and varied forms of existing public sector residential
accommodation as the previous approach under the HRP only considered a ldquoper-bedrdquo
Page | 66
approach that proved unfavourable on a number of occasions (CRU Programme Policy
Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme is believed to provide a lsquobetterrsquo suited programme and a coherent
framework to assist in dealing with a vast range of public stock which has for the most
part been indecisively and incomprehensively dealt with (Demacon 2014) The CRU
Programme targets low income individuals as well as households with an average R 3500
monthly income and who have not been able to find suitable accommodation
According to the CRU Programme in the years leading up to 2006 there was an
approximate 4512 of households nationally which fall within the R0-R800 income groups
currently renting and an approximate 4027 falling within the R801 ndash R3200 income
groups (CRU Programme Policy Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme intends to cover the following areas
a) Public hostels that are owned by Provincial Housing Departments and municipalities
b) ldquoGreyrdquo hostels which are hostel that have both a public and private ownership
component due to historical reasons
c) Public housing stock that forms part of the ldquoEnhanced Extended Discount Benefit
Schemerdquo but which cannot be transferred to individual ownership and has to be
managed as rental accommodation by the public owner
d) Post-1994 newly developed public residential accommodation owned by provincial
housing departments and municipalities
e) Existing dysfunctional abandoned andor distressed buildings in inner city or township
areas that have been taken over by a municipality and funded by housing funds
(Department of Human Settlements 2015)
The CRU programme policy document is quite a laborious document In general the CRU
programme seeks to promote and advance the provision of rental options for lower
income groups facilitate communication and participation of residents throughout the
process provide a variety of rental stock and provide secure and stable rental stock This
will be done by what the CRU Programme articulates as providing a realistic funding
programme (Department of Human Settlements 2015)
According to the CRU programme rental stock provided by the programme is to be
owned by either a provincial housing department or a municipality However this has
been a seriously contested position on the part of the individuals and households
affected by the programme who want home ownership (Dyiki interview 2015)
Page | 67
45 Conclusion
There have been a number of projects over the past several years which have in part
articulated the states aspiration to reconfigure the lsquoway of lifersquo in hostels The Hostel
Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units Programme are
considered to have been the leading approaches to reconfiguring hostels within the
countryrsquos broader landscape Whether hostels have or do not have a place in
democratic South Africa is part of what this study is looking to explore
Chapter five introduces the Sethokga hostel conversion project and in principal seeks to
unpack the conceptualisation of the project while reflecting on the findings of the
interviews
Page | 68
The Sethokga hostel conversion project
5 Introduction
Chapter five will examine the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seek to unpack
how the project has been conceptualised Discussing the main components of the
project its main stakeholders the project phases exploring what are its defining
characteristics the broad vision and aim of the project how the project has understood
the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn set to address them and then also
in what way(s) the residents of the hostel have been involved in the project Furthermore
this chapter will examine what the project considers important in terms of gender issues
what have been some limitations of the project while it also considers what the
anticipated impact and benefit of the project is
Lastly and in view of the interviews that were conducted chapter five discusses how the
residents of the hostel and the community of Tembisa and greater Ekurhuleni will know
that the project has been completed and has been successful By and large this chapter
offers testament of the findings from the field work and reviews the rationale of the
Sethokga conversion project To conclude this chapter a collage of diagrams and
images will be presented to provide the reader with greater insight(s) into the Sethokga
hostel conversion project
51 Outline of the main components of the project
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project
There have been a number of stakeholders involved in the Sethokga hostel conversion
project the main stakeholders include
o The Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement (GPDHS)
o LTE Consulting
o The Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
o The ward councillor and various community committees and leaders
o The Sethokga Hostel residents
o The community of Tembisa
Page | 69
The roles of the stakeholders are summarised as follows National government is the key
funder of the Sethokga hostel conversion project the funds are transferred to the GPDHS
who have to then ensure that the costs of the project are managed LTE Consulting is a
consulting company appointed by the GPDHS for the oversight and construction of the
Sethokga hostel conversion project They work in collaboration with the EMM (the local
authority) and its various departments such as the services department the energy
department quality assurance etc However the GPDHS remains the lsquomain decision-
makerrsquo and lsquocustodianrsquo of the project with the lead oversight on the budget and
programmeproject management The project manager Mr Sisa Majikijela is the official
from the GPDHS that is directly responsible for supervision and coordination of the
project The ward councillor and the various community committees leaders facilitate
avenues of communication and engagement between the officials (from province the
EMM and LTE) with the residents of Sethokga and community lsquoAs the eyes and ears on
the groundrsquo (Majikijela interview 2015) ideally the ward councillor and various
community committees leaders have an important role to play in ensuring that the
Sethokga residents and community will be the rightful recipients of the project The
Sethokga hostel residents and broader community have a vested interest in the project
because it stands to affect andor benefit them (Sololo interview2015)
Once the project is completed with the family units fully constructed (ie with furnishings
such as trees plants parking bays and so forth) and the services installed The project will
be handed over to the EMM for on-going administration maintenance and the
collection of rentals (Shibambo interview 2015) The Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlement in collaboration with the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and LTE
Consulting play a key role as facilitates of the conversion of Sethokga hostel into family
units (Majikijela interview 2015)
522 Project phases
The data regarding the project phases was easily accessible and generously provided by
the consulting resident engineer and the architect providing me with a market analysis
study and a few other key documents The development concept of the hostel
conversion project divides the project into three phases and further subdivides each of
the phases into two phases phases A and B (Demacon 2014)
Initial studies (ie pre-feasibility studies) were done in 2008 but the demolition of the first
four blocks of the hostel demolished for the current phase 1A only took place in August of
2011 and it was anticipated that phase 1A would be completed and handed over to the
Page | 70
municipality by the end of 2014 but this did not happen (Majikijela interview 2015) At the
time of conducting fieldwork between the months of August and September 2015 it was
said that phase 1A was near completion with just the landscaping parking and water
provision left to completed (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
Phase 1A of the project was meant to bring to completion a total of 240 units
accommodating 1 194 people to provide 69 parking bays (one per four units) a total of
54 one bedroom units 117 two bedroom units and 69 three bedroom units at an average
unit size of 324m2 477m2 and 588m2 for the one two and three bedrooms respectively
(Demacon 2014) However only a total of 222 units have been built and this shortfall was
largely attributed to the underlying dolomite geological conditions of the site (Bako and
Shibambo interview 2015)
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
The Sethokga hostel conversion project has been administered under the CRU
programme and forms part of a national agenda to convert hostels into family units
(Dyiki interview 2015) The target group under the CRU programme is individuals and
households earning between R800 and R3 500 per month who are able to enter what the
CRU programme has termed the lsquoformal private rental and social housing marketrsquo
(Demacon 2014)
The new residential units (the family units) are situated on ervan 128 and 5729 of the
Sethokga complex within the administrative jurisdiction of the Kempton Park Customer
Care Area (CCA) which is the administrative body conducting oversight of development
and town planning affairs for the Tembisa and Kempton Park areas (Demacon 2014)
The family units are three storey walk-ups and appear somewhat spacious and far more
appealing than the hostel structures The CRU proposes that bachelorsone bedroom
units of 20m2 to 35m2 should be allocated at a monthly rental of R270 ndash R450 a two
bedroom unit of 35m2-45m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R450 to R850 and
that a three bedroom unit of 45m2-80m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R850 ndash
R1650 Rentals have been and remain a contestation in a number of hostel conversion
projects across the country and Sethokga is no different According to the economic
representative for the ward Sololo interview (2015) the residents of Sethokga hostel are
contesting that they want to pay R150 for a one bedroom unit R200 for a two bedroom
unit and R300 for a three bedroom unit
According to the principles of the CRU programme the ownership of the rental housing
stock is to be reserved by either the Gauteng Provincial Department of Human
Page | 71
Settlement (GPDHS) or the EMM The ownership of the family units can be transferred by
the GPDHS to the EMM in line with the Housing Act no right(s) of ownership can be
transferred to tenants (Pienaar 2010)
The process of the Sethokga hostel conversion has on an administrative and government
support level been facilitated through a grant allocation from national government to
province (GPDHS) This grant has made provisions for pre-feasibility studies
socialcommunity facilitation the relocationreallocation of some residents (within the
hostel or to alternative sites to make way for demolition and construction of phase 1A)
and the consideration and compensation of construction costs and professional fees
(Majikijela interview 2015) The allocation of the units determining rental structures
applying indigent relief measures where necessary rental collection and maintenance
as well as the management of the family units are factors determined by the GPDHS and
the EMM cooperatively (Sololo interview 2015) The hostel residents are then at some
level consulted and lsquoencouragedrsquo to participate in this regard (Dyiki interview 2015)
Seemingly throughout project implementation the stakeholders have been kept informed
of the status and progress of the project With respect to notifying the hostel residents and
general public notices are placed in and around the hostel to inform them of meetings
and the ward councillorrsquos office take the lead on this (Mthethwa interview 2015)
There have been a number of communitypublic meetings that have taken place as the
project has progressed From the fieldwork I was not able to draw on precisely how many
meetings had taken place since or precisely when the meetings took place or what was
discussed in each of those meetings Generally the ward councillor said at least once a
month a consultative and progress report meeting would take place between the
various stakeholders where officials would engage the hostel residents and general
public
According to Majikijela interview (2015) the ward councillor and the economic rep the
main area of involvement on the part of the hostel residents has been in providing
labour A small percentage of the residents have been involved in the construction-work
and some of the clerical work on the project Their involvement in discussions on the
project is said to often be arbitrarily halted by political interference (Sololo interview
2015) For instance Bako interview (2015) the architect recalled that on the design of the
family units Liefa Architects did not talk to the end user ie the residents to ask them
what they wanted Instead a design which was informed by other examples of similar
projects was presented to the residents of Sethokga and the general public (Bako
interview 2015) ldquoThe design of the hostel was not lsquoexclusiversquo to Sethokga and its contextrdquo
(Bako interview 2015)
Page | 72
In relation to the size of the hostel and its residents only a very small percentage of the
hostel residents have been employed in the project the December 2013 January 2014
labour records reported the following
Table 1
Total workforce 66
Females 7
Males 59
Youth 28
Adults 38
Semi-skilled 20
Skilled 22
Disabled 0
General workers 24
Source LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor report
I was fortunate to have attended one of the community meetings that were held at an
old community hall within the vicinity of the hostel This meeting took place on a
Saturday the 15th of August 2015 and it was quite the experience There was a relatively
strong police presence at the meeting The police kept watch and managed the
activities inside and outside the community hall As there were concerns that the
proceedings might get out of hand and a possible tussle between those in attendance
might arise The meeting was chaired by the ward councillor and aside from the residents
of Sethokga in attendance was one official from the GPDHS an official from the EMM
community leaders and ANC committee members
There was an obvious and overwhelming male presence in the meeting tempers ran
high and there was an observable resistance from the residents of Sethokga to the
presence of the three females in the meeting This included me and two female
committee members Several times the meeting was disrupted by shouts and echoes of
discontentment questioning what women were doing at a meeting for men lsquordquothey have
no place here they do not even live hererdquo were the words of some of the men Our
presence seemed to really infuriate some of the men This was similar to what Ramphele
(1993) Segal (1991) Thurman (1997) and Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) observed in
their work and suggested that even now and within the context of Sethokga that the
men in the hostel are still quite at odds with having women as a part of their lsquogathering of
Page | 73
menrsquo and possibly even living among them The demeanour of some of the men in this
meeting suggested that they found the presence and role of women in these meetings
unneeded It was evident that these men had become far too accustomed to living
lsquoalonersquo as men Ramphele (1993) noted that the idea of an unambiguous constant and
unrestricted presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a serious point
of contention for some of men Some men expressed unwillingness while others a
struggle to comprehend or endorse this change that seemed overly unfamiliar and
challenging to come to grips with (Ramphele 1993) From my observation in this meeting
the same seems to hold true for Sethokga
The purpose of the meeting was to consult the hostel residents who were identified to be
the first recipients beneficiaries of the allocating of family units to consult them on issues
of final rental proposals allocation processes and status of the project The invitation for
this meeting was apparently only extended to those particular individuals but
subsequently the meeting was taken over by those who had objections to the process of
allocation rentals and why the meeting sought to exclude them and divide the residents
Generally the meeting was unruly and the ward councillor as well as the community
leaders and committee members struggled to manage the crowd and the rampant
tempers in the room
The agenda for the meeting is provided below to provide the reader with some context
and outline of the intension of the meeting Unfortunately tempers ran especially high in
this meeting and in my opinion none of the items on the agenda were successfully
addressed
Page | 74
Figure 8 August 15 community meeting agenda
Source Sethokga Community meeting 2015
521 Broad vision and aim of the project
The vision and aim of the project was described by the key informants who to some
extent unanimously used the following key words integration sustainability community
participation to improve peoplersquos lives restoring honour addressing the ills of hostel life
and bringing families into a safe and secure environment The housing officer for me
captured well the overall sentiments of the key informants when he said ldquowe are
surrounded and have so many companies in Tembisa so clearly you will find letrsquos say a
white guy working in the area but then they travel to Kempton Park or some other area
outside Tembisa and that is where they live So it would be nice to see him living in
Sethokga The project is about integration and not just integrating the residents of
Page | 75
Sethokga to the rest of the township but other ways of integration like racial integration
That is what I want to seerdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015)
Additionally the broad vision and aim of the hostel conversion project is to instil a culture
of payment into not just the hostel but the broader community ldquoPeople cannot just keep
wanting everything for free government cannot afford itrdquo The interviewees that
expressed this position were Majikijela Sololo Mthethwa Dyiki Bako and Shibambo
Seemingly under the CRU programme the project would seek to influence and instil this
culture of payment through the rental housing stock focus of the programme That
largely seeks to promote government owned and managed rental housing stock a
departure from the lsquofreersquo housing approach (Bako interview 2015)
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga development
Source Liefa Architects 2015
Phase 1B Phase 2B Phase 3B
Phase 1A Phase 2A
Phase 3A
Page | 76
What was surprising to me was that the family units are not intended to be occupied by
current residents only The idea is that some of the current residents would live elsewhere
and when this question was posed to the official from the GPDHS Majikijelarsquos interview
(2015) response was that the hostel residents who did not qualify in terms of the required
criteria for the renting of the units would be allocated RDPs in the neighbouring area of
Esselen Park but he could not provide clarity as to how and when this would happen
The vision of Sethokga that can be seen from the plan provided below is a reconfigured
locality Rehabilitated single-sex compounds into self contained family units furnished
with child care facilities park(s) garden(s) a community centre recreation facilities and
parking areas
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn
set out to address those needs and challenges
Although the CRU Programme only sets particular administrative operational and
project facilitation guidelines Arguably these guidelines do in some respect address
a number of the ills associated with hostels such as the issue of overcrowding lack of
privacy and poor living conditions (Pienaar 2010) Within Sethokga there are
challenges of tribalism high prevalence of HIV drug abuse alcohol abuse
criminality overcrowding lack of privacy possible health hazards a lack of ablution
facilities The hostel being unsafe for women (especially those who are staying in the
hostel illegally) was identified and shared by the key informants as some of the major
challenges confronting the hostel This view was shared by the ward councillor the
housing officer from the EMM the project manager from the GPDHS the consulting
engineer and the wardrsquos economic representative
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi the issue of tribalism occurred
as a result of what he recalls as a defining political shift ldquoafter the release of Mandela
and when they started preaching lsquothis thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions
happened according to who was Zulu or Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Here the ward councillor explains what he saw as
some of the factors that led to what is currently the strong predominance of Pedi and
Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel suggesting that
ldquoThey were mixed here when they started talking about negotiations that
there must be elections and then the IFP (Inkatha Freedom Party) was
rejecting that and that had nothing to do with membership it was a situation
of the warlords the Zulursquos terrorizing the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa
Page | 77
and standing with the white man The Zulursquos did not like that so that is where
the Zulu and Xhosa divide started and that is when you found that in
Sethokga it became predominantly more Xhosa there was fighting and war
the Zulursquos were chasing people out of their territory at the other hostels The
Xhosarsquos ran to Sethokga There was fighting everywhere even here in
Sethokga and all over the Pedis Vendas Tsongarsquos they all ran away from
those hostels where they were being chased out and they came hererdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
It was unclear as to the extent to which the project dealt with any of these
challenges and how or if they were factored into the project The project seems to
have a general lsquobest practicersquo approach to hostel conversion irrespective of the
circumstance of a particular hostel
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project
ldquoThe political volatility of the project poses an enormous threat to the successful
allocationletting of the family unitsrdquo (Majikijela interview 2015) On the part of the
key informants their continued inability to answer the perhaps not so simple question
of what would happen to those who could not afford the monthly rental of the family
units This suggested that the issue of rentals has remained a grey area even as the
project heads towards project completion ldquoWe will worry about that when we get
thererdquo was the brisk response to my inquiry on this matter Similar to what was
observed by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in the City Deep Redevelopment
project Sethokga faces a similar challenge
Certainly public community participation in any context is a complex and at times a
contentious exercise (Mdunyelwa 2015) I remain hesitant whether the Sethokga
hostel conversion project has been able to lsquotrulyrsquo engage residents and the broader
community in a transparent and reciprocal manner Seemingly affordability will be
the determining factor of who will be able to rent a unit To those who cannot afford
it stands to be seen what remedy will be extended to them
Moreover the following factors were cited as some of the limitations of the project
the lack of transparency political interference an inadequate dissemination of
information to residentscommunity and the projects failure to respond to what the
solution(s) will be for lsquonon-qualifyingrsquo residents who cannot afford the monthly rentals
Page | 78
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful
I wanted to find out from the key informants particularly those who have been
directly involved in the conversion project what for them would constitute a
successful project and how from their point of view the residents and the greater
community would know that the project is completed and has been
successfulunsuccessful Overall the leading response was that a project would be
successful when the family units are occupied Some of the interviewees added that
the process of allocating the units and resolving the myriad of issues are most
certainly likely to cause further delays and will require intricate resolution (ie peoplersquos
unwillingness and otherrsquos inability to pay tension and opposition to paying rentals
opening the letting to tenants who are not hostel residents and so forth)
In summary the thoughts shared by the housing office at the EMM and the wardrsquos
economic representative capture in essence the general position held by every one
of the key informants
ldquoFor me a complete project will be the units functioning on their own and then
people will be told during a public meeting We also need to involve the mayor the
MECs and the media People will be told that it is finished and this is what is going to
happenrdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015) ldquoAfter it has been completed I want to see 80
percent of the people who have been staying in the hostel still residing in the hostel
It must not just be open to whomever There are people as far as Johannesburg who
want to stay here because they see it being comfortable and nice forgetting we are
looking to improve the lives of the current hostel dwellers There are even those in the
township who think that people of the hostel cannot pay so this is not for themrdquo
(Sololo interview 2015)
Page | 79
53 Visual narrative of the family units
531 Architectural designsplans
The design of the family units is what the architect referred to as a multi-storey approach
ldquoThe three storey walk-ups address the need for housing much better than an RDP wouldrdquo
(Bako interview 2015) They have an urban apartment-like feel about them but the
mundane (uniform) paintwork gives them a distinct government provided social housing feel
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development plan
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 80
Figure 12 Architects Section E - E
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 11 Architects Section F ndash F
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 13 South Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 81
Figure 14 North Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 15 East Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 16 West Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 82
532 The project site of family units
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site
View of the site of the family units from one of
the hostel blocks situated adjacent to the
construction site across the street
Construction of the family units
commenced in August of 2011
Site notice placed at the entrance of the
family units construction site
The Sethokga community hall situated at
the entrance to the family units
construction site and adjacent to the
council offices
Page | 83
For the most partthe construction of the
family units is nearing completetion
Walking through the site personally I felt that
the family units had a somewhat prominent
RDP lsquolookrsquo about them
Ground floor view
The entrance into the construction site of the
family units and the site office which is
situtated within the vicinity of the site
Page | 84
533 Inside the Family units
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units
Doorway into one of the three bedroom
family units which leads into an open plan
dining and kitchen area
Each unit has its own dining sitting and
kitchen area
The construction site is lsquopolicedrsquo by the Red
Ants (a private security company)around the
clock and also a private security company
Some of the security members seen on site
they insisted I take a picture of them to
include in this study
Page | 85
Built-in sink and geyser
The family
units offer a number of distinct qualities that
the hostel clearly does not have which
include privacy and a dignified living
environmentspace
Each unit has its bathroom with a built-in
toilet bath and shower
Shower
Separate and additional toilet as part of the
three bedroom family units
The diningsitting area and two adjacent
bedrooms
Page | 86
The site of the family units is being guarded by a private security company and members
of the Red Ants (a private security company) When asked about this the official (the
project manager overseeing the Sethokga hostel conversion project) from the GPDHS
said that this was necessary to ensure that no unauthorised occupations take place This
was also to guard against any possible vandalism or the looting of materialsequipment
or the site office (Majikijela interview 2015)
54 Summary of main themes and findings
This study had a number of themes which resonate with the case study The localised
context of Sethokga hostel offered great insights into the current state of hostels as
spaces and places that still largely exist within a context of volatility poor living conditions
and complex socio-economic challenges (Thurman 1997) The historic exploits on hostels
revealed and I suppose confirmed that the hostel system was established supported and
perpetuated by methodical policy and controls to discourage the permanent settlement
of Africans in urban areas or any intention of relocating their family to urban areas (Segal
1991) Furthermore within the contemporary South African context this has posed a
number of challenges and has been a longstanding reality of a number of hostel dwellers
as observed in the work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010)
The view from one of the family units (a ground
floor three bedroom unit) is onto the ward
councillorrsquos offices and the hostel in the
distance
One of the three bedrooms in the family
units
Page | 87
Sethokga hostel is also one of many hostels that exist within a historically-laden context
The strong prominence of Pedi and Xhosa native speaking men in some respect also
speaks to the events of circular migration that are still a lived-reality of the men of
Sethokga This according to the ward councillor has meant that the men have had to
maintain ties with their families in the Eastern Cape and Limpopo while most of them live
in Sethokga away from their families (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) In terms of gender
issues the aspect of men and housing the hostel conversion project does not adopt a
particular stand on this Seemingly the project makes no effort to appreciate the
apparent rural location of the wives partners children and families of a vast majority of
the men in Sethokga The idea is that anyone who is able to afford the monthly rental of
the family units can sign a lease agreement and rent a unit However this presents a
number of issues and leaves a lot unaccounted for and unanswered ie will the families
of the men in the hostels make a transition to join them in the family units Is this even a
possibility for them what impact would this have on the already stretched social
amenities in the area Arguably in the case of Sethokga this oversight has been a serious
area of contention and has amplified the political volatility of the project
The heavy-handedness of the hostel system cunningly imposed a sense of no escape
yet quite interestingly the later unwillingness to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have their
hostel converted into family units (Thurman 1997)
Among the key findings of the research report is that the lsquorental onlyrsquo tenure option and
approach to the hostel conversion project was the biggest challenge and one of the
most critical points of contention (Pienaar 2010) On the one hand the hostel residents
are arguing that they cannot afford the proposed rentals while on the other hand
officials are of the opinion that this is in fact untrue and not wholly representative of the
attitude(s) of all the hostel residents Thus a supposed unwillingness to pay and a culture
of entitlement was cited by the key informants as the underlying state of affairs and one
that posed the biggest threat to the project and in particular how the family units would
be allocated
Although the project is for the most part about converting Sethokga hostel into family
units in principal it is also about redress integration improving the living conditions of
Sethokga residents reconfiguring the mental and physical landscape of hostels in
contemporary South Africa and introducing children and women into the hostel
Integration was repeatedly cited by the key informants as the main imperative of the
study Political interference and the very particular sensitivities around political allegiance
Page | 88
(keeping in the mind the local elections are fast approaching) are factors that were
cited would cause the greatest difficulty in the allocation of the family units
54 Conclusion
Undoubtedly the Sethokga hostel conversion project has a number of components and
features to it that are complex in part ambiguous and would require further and more
detailed study Seemingly the CRU programme is a lsquodeparturersquo from the Hostel
Redevelopment Programme In part it offers prospects to facilitate the provision of
affordable rental tenure for those earning below R3500 while seeking to promote the
integration of publicsocial housing into the broader housing market Under the
administration of the CRU programme one of the leading aims is to facilitate the creation
of sustainable public housing assets (Pienaar 2010) However the CRU programme has
been criticised as a framework that is largely operating in a policy environment that is
hostile elaborate and not speaking to the needs of the people on the ground
Furthermore many see it as solely a hostel upgrading policy viewed often to be done
impromptu in response to local pressures (Pienaar 2010) To paraphrase Pienaar (2010)
the vagueness regarding the roles and responsibilities of the respective provincial
department of human settlement and municipalities has not provided much confidence
in hostel conversion projects
Chapter five has examined the Sethokga hostel conversion project and attempted to
unpack how the project has been conceptualised This chapter has identified and
outlined the main components of the project its main stakeholders and what has been
their role in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Discussed were the project phases a
number of critical elements such as how the project has understood the needs and
challenges of the hostel residents In addition to this chapter five outlined the way(s) in
which the residents have been involved in the project if the project considered anything
important in terms of gender issues and if what have these been factored into the
project By and large chapter five drew extensively on the findings of the fieldwork and
made an effort to narrate some of the insights and perspectives shared by the key
informants To conclude the chapter a collage of diagrams and images were presented
to offer the reader a visual narrative of the site of the family units
Page | 89
Concluding chapter
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoWhat does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
61 Review and reflections
This research report consisted of six chapters chapter one introduced the study
chapter two provided the theoretical backdrop of the study chapter three
introduced the study area (Sethokga hostel) chapter four discussed the evolution of
hostel redevelopment conversion and what has been the states approach to hostel
conversion and chapter five examined the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project
In chapter one the main point of discussion was the research question outlining the
aim and objectives of the study and the research methodology
Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project been conceptualised
in how the project has been conceptualised does it address the stigma of hostel life
and it what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What informed the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail what is the broad aim and vision
of the project what is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
Page | 90
In chapter one it was also argued that this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects had somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore that there needed to be more inquiry and
study conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel
conversion projects
The studyrsquos theoretical backdrop was discussed in chapter two The aim of this was to
contextualise the term hostels as to clearly illustrate what is meant by it In addition
to drawing on particular strands of literature concepts ideas and arguments that
resonated with the study Chapter two argued that the historically the landscape of
hostels has by and large been complex at times perplexing and highly contentious
Chapter three introduced Sethokga hostel It elaborated on the locality of the hostel
and its local as well as municipal context A visual narrative of the hostel was also
provided and this captured the current state of the hostel and the conditions in which
its residents endure It was established that ironically the conditions in the hostel are
not much different to many of the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg
The hostel was badly designed poorly built and is suffering years of neglect it is in
appalling and overcrowded condition
Chapter four described the evolution of hostel redevelopment conversion in the
country and what has been the states approach to hostel conversion post-1994 This
chapter discussed in some detail the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme Arguing that these programmes have to
date been the lsquoforerunnersrsquo of the statersquos approach to addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo
While in chapter five the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
was examined Chapter five was the crux of this research report The discussions in the
chapters before it set up the groundwork for a critical exploration of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project and for unpacking the research question
Chapter six concludes this study and seeks to answer the question ldquoso what does this
mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo Since this
report was conducted as part of the requirements for the partial fulfilment of an
Urban and Regional Planning honours qualification It is important to address the ldquoso
what for plannersrsquo question and the value that this report stands to offer to the
Page | 91
planning profession Firstly let us reflect on what have been some of the limitations of
the study
62 Limitations of the study
For the most part this study had a wealth of information and sources to draw from
The insights and wisdom provided by the key informants were invaluable their
willingness and enthusiasm to participate in this study was not something I had
anticipated but I remain truly grateful
Due to certain constraints more especially time constraints and the particular scope
focus of the research report this posed some limitations to the study In only
interviewing and engaging with officials and not with the residents of Sethokga the
voices opinions and views of the officials told only one side of a many-sided story
How the project affects and has affected the residents Is this something they want
support and for those who do not what are some of their reasons for contention Is
circular migration still as prominent a feature within the current context of Sethokga
What is the present-day nature of household configurations in the hostels (is the duty
of the older men still to order the actions of the younger men ie the cleaning and up
keeping of the communal area and other household duties) what for the residents
of Sethokga would constitute a successful project
Even as this study concludes the side of the hostel residents remains largely untold
and unreported Furthermore the supposed apathy on the part of the hostel residents
and the views expressed by the key informants that family units offer the most ideal
and best alternative to the residents of Sethokga could not be explored and
interrogated further given the limitations of the scope of the study
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners
Within contemporary South Africa there have certainly been a vast number of
conflicting views held regarding what should be the role and future of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Although academics policy makers bureaucrats developers and
the general public have usually been unable to reach longstanding middle-ground
on what should be done about hostels One of the more widely held views is that
hostels certainly present a real challenge but also an opportunity For government
Page | 92
developers non-government organisations (NGOs) built environment practitioners
and needless to say the residents of hostels themselves (Thurman 1997)
Planners are frequently cast in the role of performing a balancing act (Campbell
2006) As a result the adaptability of the planning profession as a coherent and
impartial discipline has over the years become rather topical subjects (Campbell
2006) This has inevitably continued to require new and innovative ways of lsquoseeingrsquo
lsquocomprehendingrsquo and lsquodoingrsquo things in order to shape and re-shape an inherently
divergent and historic-laden urban landscape (Jupp and Inch 2012) In the midst of
the shifts in the traditional conception and role of the planning profession as a merely
procedural and administrative activity (Harrison and Kahn 2002) planning is still to a
great extent closely tied to government structures (Cornwall 2002) Therefore within
this particular context of government driven intervention urban planning
professionals stand to be instrumental facilitators of development and offer essential
expertise and tools towards addressing some of the challenges within our urban
landscape (Albert and Kramsch 1999)
This study observed a range of intertwined urban dynamics ie around housing socio-
economic distress a wavering political climate and the need to be more
environmentally conscientious This necessitates focused attention and much
consideration as the political economic social and environmental junctures in which
planning has come to operate has meant that the profession has become
susceptible to external pressures scrutiny and influence (Campbell and Marshall
2002)
64 Conclusion
South Africa has for a number of years into democracy been at a critical time of
limited housing supply and a desperate need for housing (Khan and Thurman 2001)
(Pienaar
2010) Planners have an important role to play in facilitating coordinating and
effecting the reconfiguration of the urban landscape towards improving the setting
of inherently socio-economically ailing spaces such as hostels (Jupp and Inch 2012)
Hostels have largely remained as spaces that have continued to perpetuate
underdevelopment inequality and disempowerment (Khan and Thurman 2001) If
family units are to wholly address the stigma of hostel life and the convoluted nature
Page | 93
of hostels to alter the landscape of hostels and define a novel future for hostels and
their residents It is certain that this will require decisive action collaborative efforts
and the wisdom of retrospection
Page | 94
List of references
African National Congress 1994 The Reconstruction and Development Programme A
policy framework ANC Johannesburg
African National Congress (2003) Briefing note 5 Housing
httpwwwancorgzaelections2004briefingshousingpdf
Albert A and Kramsch O (1999) Space Inequality and Difference lsquoRadical Turns
and lsquoCultural Termsrdquo European Planning Studies 7(1) 77 ndash 79
Bandyopadhyay S and Green E (2008) Nation-building and Conflict in Modern
Africa The Suntory Centre
Barnett C (1999) Broadcasting the Rainbow Nation Media Democracy and Nation-
building in South Africa Editorial Board of Antipode 31 (3) 274-303
Benit-Gbaffou C and Mathoho M (2010) A case study of participation in the City
Deep Hostel Redevelopment Project Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Bonner P and Nieftagodien N (2012) Ekurhuleni the making of an urban region
Wits University Press
Campbell H and Marshall R (2002) Values and professional identities in planning
practice in Allmendinger R And Tewdwr-Jones M (eds) Planning futures new
directions for planning theory London Routledge
Castles S and M J (Millerl (2008) The Age of Migration International Population
Movements in the Modern World New York The Guilford Press
Charlton S et al (2014) From Housing to Human Settlement Evolving Perspectives
South African Cities Network
Chipkin I and Meny-Gibert S (2011) Why the Past matters Histories of the Public
Service in South Africa PARI Short Essays number 1 Johannesburg PARI
Collinson M A and K Adazu (2006) The INDEPTH Network A demographic resource
on migration and urbanisation in Africa and Asia Views on Migration in Sub-Saharan
Africa Proceedings of an African Migration Alliance Workshop C Cross D
Gelderblom N Roux and J Mafukidze Cape Town HSRC Press 159- 172
Page | 95
Collinson M A (2006) Health Impacts of Social Transition A study of Female
Temporary Migration and its impact on Child Mortality in Rural South Africa A
dissertation submitted to the School of Public Health University of the Witwatersrand
in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master in Science in the branch of
Medicine
Cornwall A (2002) Making Spaces Changing Places Situating Participation in
Development Institute of Development Studies IDS Working Paper 170
Creswell J W (2009) Research Design Qualitative Quantitative and Mixed Methods
Approaches 3rd Edition Los Angeles Sage Publications Inc
Demacon 2014 Sethokga hostels mixed typology market analysis market research
Findings and recommendations
Department of Human Settlements Republic of South Africa Programmes and
Subsidies document assessed on 7 July 2015 from
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentspublicationshuman_settlement
s_programmes_and_subsidiespdf
Department of Social Development Republic of South Africa White Paper on
Families in South Africa 2012
Dyiki M (2006) City of Cape Town Integrating Families Hostels to Homes
Redevelopment Programme Presentation
httpswwwwesterncapegovzatext200652006_hostels_presentation-_dyikipdf
Fritz V and Menocal A R (2007) Understanding State-Building from a Political
Economy Perspective An Analytical and Conceptual Paper on Processes
Embedded Tensions and Lessons for International Engagement Report for DFIDrsquos
Effective and Fragile States Teams Overseas Development Institute
Greenberg S and Mathoho M (2010) ldquoConceptual Framework on Public
Participation and Developmentrdquo Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Page | 96
Grieger L et al (2013) Moving Out and Moving In Evidence of Short-Term Household
Change in South Africa from the National Income Dynamics Study
Goldblatt B amp Meintjes S (1996) Gender and the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission a submission to the TRC May
Harrison P And Kahn M (2002) The ambiguities of change the case of the planning
profession in the province of KwaZulu-Natal South Africa in Thornley A and Rydin Y
(eds) Planning in the global era Aldershot Ashgate
Jupp E and Inch A (2012) Planning as a profession in uncertain times Town Planning
Review Vol 83 No 5
Khan F and Thurman S (2001) Setting the Stage Current Housing Policy and
Debate in South Africa Isandla Institute
Liefa Consulting (2015) Maps diagrams source
LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor
report
Mapetla M M (2005) Aspects of urban housing for women and men in Southern
Africa Roma Lesotho National University of Lesotho
Marshall M N (1996) Sampling for qualitative research Family Practice Oxford
University Press
Mosoetsa S (2011) Eating from one pot the dynamics of survival in poor South
African households Johannesburg Wits University Press
Mdunyelwa M L (2015) Public Participation in Hostel Redevelopment Programs in
Nyanga and Langa Dissertation presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in
the Faculty of Arts and Social Science at Stellenbosch University
National Housing Report (2009) -
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentsnational_housing_20092_Techn
ical_General_Guidelines
Netshitenzhe J (2011) A Developmental State South Africarsquos developmental
Capacity UCT Summer School Mapungubwe Institute for Strategic Reflection
Page | 97
Peoples Housing Programme httpwwwjoburg-
archivecozacity_visionannualreport2002-03chapter10pdf
Pienaar J S and Cloete C E (2005) Hostel Conversion as Social Housing in South
Africa Funding Regime VS Real Needs Case Study of the Sethokga Hostel Conversion
Project Pacific Rim Real Estate Society (PRRES)
Pienaar J (2010) Community Residential Units key elements application implications
for Metros Municipal Leadership Housing Forum0
Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the Community Residential Units
Programme 2006
httpwwwgovzaabout-governmentgovernment-programmescommunity-
residential-unit-cru-programme
Ramphele M (1993) A Bed Called Home Life in the Migrant Labour Hostels of Cape
Town Ohio Ohio University Press
Segal L (1991) The Human Face of Violence Hostel dwellers speak In The Journal of
Southern African Studies Vol 18 No 1
SJN Development Planning Consultants (2000) Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial
Development Framework
South African Department of Housing 2008 Community Residential Programme
httpwwwhousinggovzaContentCRUHomehtm
South African Local Government Association
httpwwwsalgaorgzaappwebrootassetsfilesGuidelines20for20Municipalities
Flyer20rental20housing20NMApdf
South African Yearbook 20122013
httpwwwsouthafricanewyorknetconsulateYearbook2020131320Human20S
ettlemp
Statistics South Africa Census (2001) Concepts and Definitions Report
httpswwwStatistics+South+Africa+Census+(2001)+Concepts+and+Definitions+Repo
rt+03-02-26+Version
Thurman S (1997) Umzamo improving hostel dwellersrsquo accommodation in South
Africa Environment and Urbanisation Vol 9 No 2
Page | 98
Urban Sector Network Final Report August 2000 ndash April 2003 Hostel Redevelopment
httppdfusaidgovpdf_docsPdaby792pdf
Van der Berg S (2010) Current poverty and income distribution in the context of
South African history Stellenbosch Economic Working Papers 2210
Von Holdt K (2010) Nationalism Bureaucracy and Developmental State The South
African Case South African Review of Sociology Volume 41 Number 1
Watt A (2012) Essentials of project management
httpopentextbccaprojectmanagement
Ziehl S C (2001) Documenting Changing Family Patterns in South Africa Are Census
Data of any Value African Sociological Review 5(2)
Interviews with key informants
Shibambo Vincent Resident Engineer LTE Consulting Interview 14thAugust 2015
(Sethokga family units project site)
Mthethwa Jabu Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Housing Officer Interview 17
August 2015 (Ekurhuleni Kempton Park Housing Offices)
Mohlapamaswi Ward Councillor ANC Tembisa Ward 4 Interview 18 August 2015
(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers
Sololo Lufefe Ward 4 Economic Development Representative Interview 18 August
2015(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers)
Majikijela Sisa Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlements Sethokga
Hostel Conversion Project Manager Interview 19 August 2015 (Sethokga family units
project site boardroom)
Dyiki Malibongwe Housing Development Agency Official 7 September 2015
(Housing Development Agency head office Killarney Johannesburg)
Bako Simba Liefa Architects Interview 9 September (LTE House Sunninghill
Johannesburg)
Page | 10
51 Outline of the main components of the project68
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project68
512 Project phases69
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project70
521 Broad vision and aim of the project74
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and
in turn set to address those needs and challenges76
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project77
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful78
53 Visual narrative of the site of the family units79
531Architectural designsplans79
532 The project site of the family units82
533 Inside the family units84
53 Summary of main themes and findings86
54 Conclusion88
Chapter six Concluding chapter89
61 Review and reflections89
62 Limitations of the study91
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners91
64 Conclusion92
List of references94
Page | 11
Pages
Maps
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni
hostel and Vusimuzi hostel40
Map 2 Locality map44
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex45
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework48
Figures
Figure 1 Ground floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 2 First floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 3 Elevation of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 4 Collage of exterior imagery of the hostel50
Figure 5 Collage of interior imagery of the hostel52
Figure 6 Municipal amenities54
Figure 7 The adjoining area55
Figure 8 Community meeting agenda74
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga developmenthelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip76
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development planhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip79
Figure 11 Architects Section F-Fhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figue 12 Architects Section E-Ehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figure 13 South Elevation80
Figure 14 North Elevatonhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip81
Figure 15 East Elevation81
Figure 16 West Elevation81
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site82
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units84
Table
Table 1 Total workforce in the period December 2013 - January 2014 Sethokga
sitehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip72
Page | 12
ANC African National Congress
Cllr Councillor
CRU Community Residential Units
DoHS Department of Human Settlements
EMM Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
GPDHS Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement
HRP Hostel Redevelopment Programme
IDP Integrated Development Plan
IFP Inkatha Freedom Party
MSDF Metropolitan Spatial Development Framework
PWV Pretoria ndash Witwatersrand ndash Vereeniging
RDP Reconstruction and Development Programme
SDF Spatial Development Framework
USAID United States Agency for International Development
USN Urban Sector Network
Page | 13
Chapter one will essentially introduce the research report The aim of this chapter is as
follows highlight the objective of the study provide a background to the study and
also discuss the rationale and problem statement In addition to detailing the
research question the significance of this study and the research methodology will
also be reviewed
Coincidently this research report is written and takes place at a time where there has
been somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms With the prevailing question being ldquoWhat iscontinues to be the
role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo Although this study will not in effect
actively seek to answer that particular question it presents a valuable premise for this
study ldquoFamily units to address the stigma of hostel liferdquo
The main aim of this chapter is to contextualise hostel to position the study within an
expanded theoretical framework The main chapter will in part argue that hostels
have largely remained as urban enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric and
that the rigid structures of regulation and control which were imposed on hostel
dwellers have perpetuated a complex state of affairs The literature review section
which details some of the key concepts theories ideas and arguments on the topic
will elaborate further on this
This chapter aims to provide a comprehensive description of the study area and so it
is in this chapter that the local as well as municipal context of the study area will
altogether be considered The aim of this chapter is to provide the reader with a sort
of lsquofeelrsquo of Sethokga hostel and its present-day circumstance It will attempt to
articulate to the reader the authors own experience and account of the study area
Page | 14
in an effort to provide the reader with a well-versed narrative of the multifaceted
nature of the hostel and the complex reality in which its residents endure
The South African statersquos approach to hostel redevelopment conversion is
discussed It is argued that the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of hostel
redevelopment conversion Chapter four discusses a number of state policy and
approaches addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo Ahead of this however the evolution of the
hostel redevelopment conversion approach is examined which dates back to the
earliest (soon after 1994) efforts by the South African government to remedy the ills of
the hostel system
Chapter five examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seeks to unpack
the conceptualisation of the project This chapter reflects and draws extensively on
the findings of the field work and the invaluable insights offered by the key informants
The main components of the hostel conversion project are examined and the vision
of Sethokga personified by the hostel conversion project is presented in chapter five
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoSo what does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
Page | 15
Introductory chapter
In the wake of the political transition in South Africa in 1994 and for some time
preceding this time frame violence squalor overcrowding and socio-political strife
had long become characteristic of some of the features associated with hostels and
the stigma of hostel life (Thurman 1997) Due to its history as systematically
disempowered yet politically vocal enclaves we have come to know or perhaps be
familiar with hostels as highly contentious and antagonistic environments with a
burdened local identity (Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The stigma of hostel life constitutes among a host of conditions an innate reality
where the residents of hostels inhibit isolated destitute and unbecoming spaces
(Segal 1991) Built as single-sex labour compounds to accommodate African migrant
labourers for the duration of their stay in South Africarsquos white urban areas hostels
occupy a unique position within the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape
(Thurman 1997) As sojourners in South Africarsquos white urban areas the law
constructed a lsquolegalrsquo person called a labourer who was lsquoauthorisedrsquo to temporarily
reside in the urban space but had to retreat to their rural quarters once their lsquoservicersquo
had been concluded (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Thus to draw attention to the
unkindness of their living conditions many hostel dwellers have continued for the
better part of South Africarsquos democracy to lsquochoosersquo physical violence as a tool
perceived to best serve and afford some attention to their troubles (Pienaar and
Crofton 2005)
Within the context of this research report the term hostels widely refer to single-sex
dormitory style labour compounds which emerged in South Africa under the
apartheid system and ideology of separate development (Pienaar and Crofton
2005) The ideology of separate development and the resultant influx control policies
were a distinctive trait of the government of a particular juncture in the countryrsquos
history - a government that as part of its mandate held to discourage the permanent
settlement of the African populace in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) This further
translated itself in the governmentrsquos refusal to plan and consent to any sort of
lsquomeaningfulrsquo investment into areas designated for the other who were primarily
located in the townships on the periphery of the urban terrain (Ramphele 1993)
Page | 16
Badly designed poorly built and suffering many years of neglect hostels were
primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for the comfort of hostel
dwellers (Thurman 1997) Conceivably the hostel system socialised its inhabitants into
an undignified and callous condition which has in some respect persisted and has
unfortunately not wholly been reconciled (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In hostels that
were male occupied hostel dwellers were regarded as lsquomen of four worldsrsquo which
referred to their present and existing life within the hostel the surrounding township(s)
places of work and their rural homes (Segal 1991) The hostel system made it
impossible for hostel dwellers to live in the hostel with their families ie wives
husbands partners children (Segal 1991) This consequence is particularly important
to note at this early stage in the report because of the wisdom and context it adds as
the study progresses
Coincidently this research is written and takes place at a time where there has been
somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms Undoubtedly the prevailing question has been ldquoWhat is should be
the role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo The current Minister of Human
Settlements has said that ldquohostels no longer have a place within South Africarsquos
democratically reconfigured state and so the state needs to get rid of hostelsrdquo (Sisulu
2015) However in a nation such as South Africa efforts towards transition are
ambiguous complex and can often be marked by violence (Mosoetsa 2011)
According to Thurman (1997) of an estimated 604 000 hostel beds around the country
in the late 1990s accommodated whole families relatively close to urban centres
Furthermore Thurman argues that hostels present both a significant challenge and an
opportunity for government NGOs developers and hostel dwellers themselves High
density housing stock stood to gain a considerably large supply of low income
(Thurman 1997) Even while a large number of hostel redevelopmentconversion
projects continue to be riddled with tension and difficulty the prospect(s) for change
and reform that they offer cannot simply be dismissed
This study seeks to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel conversion project to
develop an informed understanding of the defining features and characteristics of
this particular hostel conversion project It examines what is and what has been the
nature of engagement and dialogue between the various stakeholders involved and
discusses the insights they were able to offer to this study In 2015 21 years into South
Page | 17
Africarsquos democracy we have to wonder what is needed to make amends and offset
the dishonour of hostel life
11 Background to the study
We have to understand what the hostel system did was to lsquoaccommodatersquo the
African populace in single-sex labour compounds (Segal 1991) Upon their arrival
their presence in urban areas was constrained as they were met with strict rules and
restrictions (Ramphele 1993) In turn social relations were severally volatile and
ambiguous under the hostel system as hostel dwellers were constrained in their ability
to interact in certain or in their own chosen ways (Thurman 1997) There have been a
number of authors who have noted that the notion of family was partly if not entirely
redefined under this system (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were designed with little or no
thought given of human comfort security and interaction and many are still in
appalling neglected and overcrowded conditions (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) For
many people hostels represent a bitter and hopeless reminder of the past while for
others they are a well prized and affordable shelter in an environment of serve
homelessness (Thurman 1997)
Accordingly soon after 1994 South Africarsquos democratic government made some
attempt to convert hostels into environments suitable for family life although the
extent of this has not entirely been clear (DoHS 2015) This was met with hostility
violence and unwillingness by some hostel dwellers particularly those in the Pretoria
Witwatersrand and Vereeniging (PWV) region to have their hostels
convertedredeveloped into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010) The
violence that had become synonymous with hostel life became an overwhelming
impediment that proved difficult to overcome (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that the idea of an unambiguous constant and unrestricted
presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a point of contention for
some of the men who had far too long become accustomed to living lsquoalonersquo as
men Some expressed unwillingness while others found it a struggle to comprehend or
endorse this change that seemed far too unfamiliar and a challenge to come to
grips with (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Thus in hostels where hostel conversion projects have since taken-off the general
attitudes perceptions and reception of the projects have in some respects continued
to be negative and unwelcomed Scepticism tension and hostility add to the already
complex nature of the hostel conversion projects (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
Page | 18
2010) Hostels are still largely spaces confronted with deep social injustices (ie poor
living conditions a lack of privacy overcrowded) and are an insult to the dignity of
their occupants in several ways as both spatially limited and socio-economically
limiting spaces (Ramphele 1993) The limits imposed by hostels onto hostel dwellers
have persisted in protracting unkindness and a distorted conception of the
fundamental purpose of housing Hostels remain as an unfortunate symbol of a
former governmentrsquos refusal and failure to acknowledge the personhood (the
position and quality of being an individual or having feelings perspectives integrity
and human characteristics needs and wants) of the men and women they housed
(Ramphele 1993)
12 Rationale
Arguably hostel conversion projects and particularly the conceptualisation of these
projects is still a relatively under-researched field Based on my efforts to find
published work on the subject and even though there have been a number of
hostels across the country which have undergone or are undergoing hostel
conversion this remains a rather neglected study field
Hostels within their historic make-up were for the most part premised on fairly uniform
ideals arrangements and gender configurations The demographic setting within
some hostels across the country have since become a lot more fluid and departed
from their former mandatory construct (as strictly single-sex spaces) In what were
predominantly male occupied hostels women and children have since moved into
some of those hostels
Sethokga hostel which will serve as the case study for this research is a hostel that is
still predominantly male occupied but is undergoing hostel conversion to convert the
hostel into family units I believe that the fact that the hostel is still predominantly
male occupied presents an intriguing dimension to this study on hostel conversion
and efforts to grapple with the research question
13 Problem statement
In the case of Sethokga hostel a hostel conversion project is underway but it is not
clear what has sparked such a conversion and to what extent it is driven by the
available policies or assessments of needs or what attempt has been made to meet
these needs Subsequently what would the conversion of a predominantly male
Page | 19
dominated hostel rife with historically inherent conditions necessitate Therefore
how has the conversion project grasped the experience of men within such a hostel
and how has it grasped the concept of family life
14 Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units been conceptualised and
based upon the conceptualised ideas does it address the stigma of hostel life and it
what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What led to the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail What is the broad aim and vision
of the project What is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
15 The significance of the study - positioning the study relative to existing academic
literature
The significance of this research report lies in what I believe is a gap in the scope of
work covered over the years on hostels particularly on hostel conversion projects
Based on my efforts to find published work on the subject questions around what
these projects entail their implications relevance and impact remain unanswered
In the work I have managed to access so far this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects has somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore there needs to be more inquiry and study
conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel conversion
projects
As documented by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) there are vast and intricate
layers of engagement communication participation and even discontentment
Page | 20
involved in hostel conversion projects For instance the legitimacy around where
decision-making lies and which avenues are or should be available to voice
concerns have been some of the challenges relating to hostel conversion and have
added to the already complex nature of these projects
There is most certainly room for a study to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel
conversion project and probe this idea that family units could serve as an adequate
tool for the apt reform of hostels as many of us have come to know them associate
with them or even disassociate from them
16 Aim and objectives of the research
The main aim of this research report is to examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project and how the project has been conceptualised
Objectives
To examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
To develop a more comprehensive understanding of the hostel conversion
approach relative to the socio-economic and political context of the hostel
To explore the possibility and potential of family units as a viable tool to
addressing the stigma of hostel life
To examine how the project has understood the needs and challenges of the
residents and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
To examine the specific spatial focus of the project
17 Research methodology
171 Type of research
The methodology used in the study is a qualitative approach to research and semi-
structured interviews were conducted as the primary means of data collection
Additionally the data collection process involved the use of a variety of sources
which ranged from books journal articles newspaper articles and online media
platforms in the form of articles and radio podcasts
Page | 21
According to Cresswell (2009) this particular method to research (a qualitative
method) entails among other things the use of horizontal dialogue conversation and
the exchange of ideas between the interviewer and the interviewees (Cresswell
2009) Key informants were identified on the basis of their knowledge of andor
involvement in the Sethokga hostel conversion project and the following individuals
were interviewed
1st interviewee Mr Vincent Shibambo resident engineer with LTE consulting (the
company facilitating the construction and administration of the project) Interview
conducted 14th August 2015 at the project site The interview took place in the
boardroom of the project site offices
2nd interviewee Mr Jabu Mthethwa housing officer from the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality Interview conducted 17th August 2015 the interview took place in Mr
Mthethwarsquos office at the council offices in the Kempton Park CBD area
3rd interviewee ANC Ward 4 Tembisa Ward Councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi Interview
conducted 18th August 2015 in the ward councillorrsquos office at the ward councillors
chambers situated adjacent to the project site offices within the vicinity of the hostel
4th interviewee Mr Lufefe Sololo Ward 4 Tembisa Economic Development Rep (Mr
Sololo sits on the ward committee that advises the ward councillor) Interview
conducted 18th of August 2015 at Sethokga hostel
5th interviewee Mr Sisa Majikijela official from the Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlements Mr Majikijela is the current project manager of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project Interview conducted 19th of August 2015 in the boardroom
of the project site offices
6th interviewee Mr Malibongwe Dyiki who was a resident of a hostel in Cape Town in
the early 1980s He then became a community representative in later years and then
moved on to be a government official facilitating hostel redevelopments in the
Western Cape He has written and published on hostels and has also participated in
policy discussions on the Hostel Redevelopment Programme Interview was done on
the 7th of September 2015 at the Housing Development Agencyrsquos head office in
Killarney Johannesburg where he is currently working as the Programme Manager for
the mining towns programme
7th interviewee Simba Bako architect with Liefa Architects (appointed by LTE
consulting Liefa Architects were responsible for the design of the family units)
Page | 22
Interview conducted on the 9th of September 2015 at LTE House in Sunninghill
Johannesburg
172 What kind of information is needed
The kind of information that was needed was information which contextualised the
study area within its broader local and municipal context Pre-existing data
particularly demographic and statistical data on the hostel and its surroundings
Ekurhulenirsquos Integrated Development Plan the Metrorsquos Spatial Development
Framework and information that would give an overview of the geographic social
economic and possibly even the political context of the study area is needed
Moreover project reports studies memorandums or minutes and state policy on
hostel conversion would also be useful
173 Collecting data
In collecting data there were a number of methods and tools that were used which
involved moments of ad hoc discussion and deliberation around the topic What was
invigorating and always thrilling was peoplersquos interest and curiosity regarding this
study The impromptu encounter(s) with people who were open and ready to share
their point of views and experience(s) honestly made the data collection process
that much easier
There was a considerable amount of time spent on examining literature books
articles (both academic and media sources) sources on the internet and journals
Collecting data also involved examining similar programmes and projects on hostel
conversionredevelopment so collecting desktop data and consulting library sources
was an invaluable part of collecting data
174 Sampling
The study sample is important for any research The choice between qualitative
quantitative or even the consideration of using a mixed methods approach should
be determined by the research question and not decided subjectively In grappling
with the research question it seemed most appropriate for the purpose of this study to
make use of a qualitative approach It was believed that a qualitative approach
Page | 23
would provide the necessary framework to respond to the research question and
address the aim and objectives of the study In answering the lsquohowrsquo and lsquowhyrsquo
questions that the study would pose a qualitative approach would engage in a sort
of comprehensive exploration of the many-sided and possibly complex dynamics of
the Sethokga hostel conversion project For this reason a qualitative interview-
centred approach was used (Marshall 1996)
Marshall (1996) argues that there are three broad methods commonly used in
selecting a study sample that is convenience judgement and theoretical sampling
techniques Convenience sampling involves the most accessible person(s) it is the
least time consuming requires the least effort and financing Judgement sampling
also referred to as purposeful sampling is according to Marshall (1996) the most
widely used sampling technique With judgement sampling the researcher
purposefully and actively selects a sample that would best respond to their research
question and in principle convenience is set aside While theoretical sampling
involves a process of selection of a sample that is mainly driven by and rooted in a
theoretical position the sample is selected to examine or elaborate a particular
theory (Marshall 1996)
For the purpose of this study the judgemental sampling technique was used and this
entailed the active and purposeful selection of what Marshall refers to as lsquosubjectsrsquo
with particular expertise ie key informants The sample selection was based on my
prior experience and practical knowledge of the study area The limitation however
was that there were quite a number of elaborate and contentious issues at play
which within the limits of this study could not be explored at length on account of
time constraints and the particular focus of this study
175 Ethical considerations
As a young female scholar entering into a rather conflicted lsquotoughrsquo and culturally-
laden environment I was faced with what was an apparent concern for safety and
so on my trips to the hostel I was always accompanied by my father or a friend
Initially my intention was to interview some of the hostel residents but the sensitivities
around the harshness of their living conditions were highlighted as a possible area of
vulnerability and the spate of xenophobia attacks particularly in and around hostels
suggested reconsideration As a researcher I ensured that the participants were all
Page | 24
well aware and informed that their participation was voluntary and they were at
liberty to withdraw their involvement at any stage The interviewees were informed of
the choice to remain anonymous if they wished and that the information they shared
would be used to develop this research report Thus my ethical obligation as a
researcher was to ensure that I did minimal harm and unintentional damage through
my research that I conducted myself responsibly and professionally at all times and
that I reported accurately what I found including unforeseen and even negative
findings
18 Conclusion
Hostels consolidated the migrant labour system They served not only to control the
number of black labour residing in urban areas but also to manage its behaviour As
hostels were designed to be unattractive and uncomfortable many comparisons
have been made between hostels and institutions such as army barracks and prisons
There is a window of opportunity in promoting hostel conversion but injecting
resources into previously marginalised communities have resulted and is resulting in
conflict local power struggles and competition for those resources (Thurman 1997)
The next chapter will discuss the theoretical backdrop of this study and elaborate on
key concepts theories ideas and arguments that have been of particular relevance
to unpacking the research question
Page | 25
Theoretical backdrop
2 Introduction
It is imperative at this point to contextualise the term hostels so as to clearly il lustrate
what is meant by it This section of the report will contextualise the term hostels and it
will examine key concepts theories ideas and arguments that are of particular
relevance to the study
Furthermore chapter two argues that hostels have largely remained as urban
enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
It argues that the rigid structures of regulation and control that were imposed upon
the former inhabitants of hostels were essentially just one part of a multi-faceted and
disconcerting circumstance that has continued to live on within a large number of
hostels (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012) This view that hostels operated and in some
respect continue to operate under a complex set of circumstances is shared and
supported by the work of authors such as Segal (1991) Ramphele (1993) Goldblatt
and Meintjes(1996) Thurman (1997) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) Dyiki (2006) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) Subsequently some of their work will be used to
unpack the research question and draw on certain aspects that resonate with the
case study The following abridged abstract describes some of the complexities
around hostels and the views captured in the work of some of the authors mentioned
above
According to Segal (1991) hostel life and the regulations imposed upon hostel
dwellers made it extremely difficult to maintain family life that is men would leave
their families in the rural areas for long periods of time to find work in the city
Ramphele (1993) notes that the families of the men would then became reliant for
their survival upon the remittance of the men Mapetla (2005) makes a compelling
argument that suggests that within contemporary society men are traditionally
culturally and even spiritually still regarded as the head the protector and provider of
their families even as the lines delineating the roles of men and women within
contemporary society have become faint and more fluid Arguably hostels still exist
within a highly complex setting (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Page | 26
21 Contextualising hostels
Generally hostels were badly designed poorly built and many have been suffering
years of neglect (Thurman 1997) Hostels were primarily built to accommodate
African migrant workers for the containment of their labour over the duration of their
stay in what were demarcated as South Africarsquos white urban areas (Thurman 1997)
There are notably three types of hostels namely public sector private sector and
grey sector hostels (Ramphele 1993)
Public sector hostels are hostels that were built and managed by provincial or local
authorities and mainly accommodated workers across a range of sectors (Ramphele
1993) Private sector hostels were built by private sector enterprise to house private
sector labourers who would mainly be working in the factories and mines (Pienaar
and Crofton 2005) Grey sector hostels were built on public sector-owned land by the
private sector under some form of contractual agreement with a government
authority (provincial or local) but were largely managed and controlled by private
sector employers (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Public and grey sector hostels were
generally situated in the townships (Thurman 1997) However when they were
planned these hostels were generally located on the outskirts of the cities but with
increased urban growth they now relatively tend to be more centrally situated
(Thurman 1997)
Ramphele (1993) argued that each hostel had a distinct form and quality about it
Elements of tribalism certain customs systems of belief and association dimensions of
conflict and conflict resolution were not homogeneous across all hostels (Ramphele
1993) The type of work that the migrant labourers did across the sectors they worked
was often rudimentary It ranged from unskilled to very basic semi-skilled work and it
was quite labour intensive in return for meagre earnings (Ramphele 1993)
Historically hostels were characterised by two main geographic classifications firstly
hostels in the backdrop of an urban context (ie also referring to inner city hostels)
and secondly hostels in the areas around mines (Segal 1991) According to Segal
(1991) urban context hostels had a more diffused grouping of hostel dwellers than
their mining counterparts (Segal 1991) Hostels in urban context developed broader
and somewhat complex relations with the outside community This contrasted with
the extreme isolation of hostel dwellers in hostels around the mines Therefore hostels
in the urban context were to a lesser extent conceived to be lsquomore openrsquo and lsquoless
strictly controlledrsquo However both were essentially sites of control and exploitation
Page | 27
with clearly marked physical boundaries in form of high walls and fences with single
and restricted entry and exit points (Segal 1991)
Hostels in urban areas had government bureaucracies responsible for their
management and maintenance as opposed to a single employercompany (Segal
1991) Moreover hostels in the urban context accommodated a wider and more
diverse range of workers who did not necessarily work for the same
employercompany or have uniform working hours or shifts In urban hostels ethnicity
was not the official organiser of hostel dwellers as men from different backgrounds
and homelands would and could share rooms (Ramphele 1993) Lastly and perhaps
the most important distinguishing feature of the two was the fact that hostels in urban
areas were not under the extensive force of lsquototal controlrsquo as was the experience of
mining hostel dwellers (Segal 1991 Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
According to Pienaar and Crofton (2005) public sector hostels accommodated the
largest number of hostel dwellers Overall the quality of living environment of hostels
was generally poor but this was particularly bad in public sector hostels (Ramphele
1993) Additionally the administrative processes and management of public sector
hostels was under dire strain as no clear records of those that lived in the hostels or
those entering and exiting the hostel were kept (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that although private sector hostels were considered to be
better managed and maintained The general state of all hostels whether public or
privately owned was largely characterised by poor living conditions a lack of
privacy the sharing of very limited spaces a distressed local context and
overcrowded conditions (Ramphele 1993) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) further note
that around the early 1980s hostel residents simply started to withdraw from payment
of rentals and thus the maintenance of the hostels grew even thinner and steadily
non-existent Public sector hostels grew especially financially and politically
unmanageable (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
22 Key concepts theories ideas and arguments
To unpack the research question and contextualise the study within a broader
theoretical framework this section of the report will discuss and draw on a number of
concepts theories ideas and arguments
Page | 28
221 The historic model of hostels the conceptualisation of the hostel system
In grappling with the historic model of the hostel system this section of the report will
discuss two main themes The conceptualisation of the hostel system and migration
migrant labour as conceived under the hostel system It illustrates the effect hostels
have had on shaping the lives and experiences of their inhabitants in unique and
complex ways (Thurman 1997)
South Africa is a country marked by a legacy of systematic discrimination and the
deliberate disempowerment of a lsquocategoryrsquo of its population (Thurman 1997) Hostels
were established supported and perpetuated by methodical policy frameworks and
brute controls to discourage the permanent settlement of the in historically lsquowhite
areasrsquo (Segal 1991) Thurman (1997) argues that hostels occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are symbolic of three centuries of
systematic racial discrimination
Seemingly ignited by and originating in the mining industry in the nineteenth century
the construction of hostels reached a peak during the 1960s and 1970s in the period
that has been referred to as the ldquogrand apartheidrdquo years (Thurman 1997) They were
built as single-sex dormitory compounds to accommodate African migrant labourers
as sojourners in what were delineated as white urban areas (Ramphele 1993) In
hostels which were intended strictly for male migrant labourersrsquo job-seeking by
African women was criminalised and a deliberate policy not to provide family
housing was pursued (Ramphele 1993)
Common to hostels was the blurring and hostility of the boundaries between the
hostel dwellers place(s) of work and their living spaces (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) In
turn some authors have argued that hostels in some sense functioned as a lsquototal
institutionrsquo According to Segal (1991) and Ramphele (1993) geographically many
hostels were isolated and situated literally at the edges of urban areas and society in
general They were primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for
human comfort safety or enrichment (Thurman 1997) The heavy-handedness of the
hostel system imposed a cunning inferiority complex a sense of no escape yet quite
interestingly a later unwillingness and indifference to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have
their hostel converted into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Ramphele (1993) and Segal (1991) make a rather compelling argument and share
the view that the behaviour and conduct of some of the hostel dwellers against
Page | 29
having their hostel converted into family units is indicative of similar behaviour and
actions displayed by long-term prisoners and people contained in barracks They
argue that a substantial number of long-term inmates would in some instances
display great unwillingness and some difficulty to the prospect of re-entering society
after being socialised into a total institution a reformatory (Ramphele 1993 and
Segal 1991) According to a text by Statistics South Africa (2001) an institution can be
defined as a communal place of residence for persons with common characteristics
(Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001) One could then argue
that one of the common characteristics shared by many hostels was the migrant
labourer status attributed to them (Dyiki 2006)
222 Migration and the notion of migrant labour labourers as conceived under the hostel
system
Castles and Miller (2008) argues that all through time and space individuals and
families have been migrating and doing so for a number of reasons Universally the
migration lsquophenomenonrsquo was and has been as a result of varying factors and in
response to certain causes and events such as demographic growth environmental
changes development vs underdevelopment and the seeking of lsquobetterrsquo
opportunities (Castles and Miller 2008) Others have turned to migration to seek jobs
often located or perceived to be concentrated in larger urban centres (Collinson
and Adazu 2006 Castles and Miller 2008)
Migration can occur as a voluntary or forced process This study is particularly
interested in the event of migration that becomes forced migration when the
circumstances of individuals and families leave them little or no choice but to pursue
lsquohopersquo away from their native home-base (Castles and Miller 2008) Arguably this was
characteristic of the hostel model Hostels enabled mines and later other industries to
suppose and cause that hostel dwellers had homes in rural areas (Collinson 2006)
Seemingly the rural populace was the lsquodesiredrsquo workforce ushered into the city and
mines and exploited as labourers for the development of the urban-based economy
(Thurman 1997)
According to Thurman (1997) the residents of hostels were typically considered as
rural traditionalists and lsquodangerousrsquo outsiders by the residents of townships which
surrounded the hostel Their physical as well as social isolation meant that they often
retained strong links with their rural home-base (Segal 1991) This involved the
Page | 30
periodic movement of individual household members between the hostel and their
rural homes (Thurman 1997) The ruralurban linkages which were subsequently
fashioned became a distinguishing feature of not just hostel dwellers but the black
African populace and as a part of their experience of urban life (Collinson and
Adazu 2006) The costly urban world was thus considered by many as merely a place
of work (Segal 1991 and Ramphele 1993)
This type of migration - also often referred to as lsquocircularrsquo or lsquooscillatingrsquo migration -
became characteristic of a sort of temporary sentiment to life and living in the city
(Dyiki 2006) Additionally the events of circular migration presented certain
household dynamics and challenges in maintaining the often faint links between the
migrant and the households family left behind (Collionson 2006 Ramphele 1993)
Conceivably hostel dwellers have for a long time had a common rural orientation
(Segal 1991) ldquoIt has been repeatedly demonstrated that migrants do not leave
behind the countryside in their journey to the cityrdquo and this rural consciousness has
remained central to the migrant labour population (Segal 1991 9)
Within contemporary society the concept of lsquothe new economies of labour
migrationrsquo has emerged as an alternative position and argues that migration can be
and has become a household strategy (Collinson and Adazu 2006) According to
Collinson and Adazu (2006) within their analysis of contemporary migration patterns
migration has now largely become something that is purposefully chosen by
members of a household family This phenomenon involves the temporary migration
of some individuals within the household family in pursuit of opportunities towards
the collective betterment of the family household or even their broader community
(Collinson and Adazu 2006) Under this model of migration family and community
networks are considered to play an important and supporting role in facilitating
migration between urban-based and village-based households families (Collinson
and Adazu 2006) What is then required of the migrant is thatheshe reciprocate the
initial support offered by hisher household family community as received in hisher
rural-base (Collinson and Adazu 2006)
While in some respect migration is becoming a lsquolonged-forrsquo process and somewhat of
a deliberate choice on the other hand adverse circumstances force families
households to partake in this process as a means of survival (Collinson and Adazu
2006) The ability of migrants to maintain both an urban and rural residence in
whatever context ie historic or contemporary continues to present a social
geographic and economically complex state of affairs (Pienaar and Crofton (2005)
Page | 31
223 The notion of bedhold
The context of hostels designed to be uncomfortable and uninviting the closest
likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo was in the form of a bed Every aspect of life and
survival in hostels revolved around a bed (Ramphele 1993) According to Ramphele
(1993) this in turn perpetuated a circumstance of lsquoclientelismrsquo and blurred the lines of
patronage when it came to the exchanging of the membership of beds and when
beds were to be allocated or reallocated (Ramphele 1993) The ill-defined and fluid
relationship of patronage between bed-holders would in some respect function like
and resemble households (Ramphele 1993 Segal 1991 Mosoetsa 2011)
In some sense bed-holders assumed an intermediary role and served an informal
function as lsquolandlordsrsquo thus as proprietors of the bedhold (Ramphele 1993) Hostel
dwellers became lsquobed-holdersrsquo rather than lsquohouse-holdersrsquo in the urban space
(Segal 1991) It became unduly problematic that the bed was the only space over
which they could have any measure of control It after all distorted the perceptions
hostel dwellers developed of themselves in relation to their environment constraining
them to varying degrees (Ramphele 1993) Ramphele (1993) argues that the limits set
by physical space in hostels also defined in very clear terms the inside versus the
outside security versus insecurity family versus non-family and urban versus rural She
further argues that onersquos very identify in the hostel and their lsquolegal existencersquo in the
urban space depended on their attachment to a bed (Ramphele 1993) According
to Ramphele (1993) the bed acted as a sort of mediator thus lsquoa go-betweenrsquo the
hostel dwellers and the rest of society to which they remain somewhat disconnected
and possibly indifferent (Ramphele 1993)
224 The stigma of hostel life
The stigma of hostel life gave a rather conspicuous meaning to lsquoblack urban lifersquo and
their experience(s) of life in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were badly
designed poorly built and many suffer years of neglect (Thurman 1997) There have
been a number of authors who have argued that hostel dwellers suffered a great
injustice to their humanity their perception of self constrained relations with others
and a constant struggle to maintain family networks with their often rural-base
(Goldblatt and Mentjies 1996)
Page | 32
The living conditions in hostels have been expressed in basic terms as shocking
disgusting inhumane cruel and intolerable by both scholars and residents of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Hostel accommodation is undesirable both aesthetically and
conceptually and there are a number of common features which characterise most
hostels a lack of privacy overcrowded and poor living conditions very limited space
and a serious state of disrepair (Ramphele 1993) Failing to delineate private
personal space the purpose of hostels was to ensure a compliant labour force (Segal
1991)
According to Ramphele (1993) hostels represent physical space that is not only
limited but is also limiting Ramphele makes a distinction between the circumstance
and living arrangements of hostel dwellers and township residents Arguing that
although physical overcrowding of sleeping accommodation between the two
(hostel dwellers and township residents) many not be much different in terms of the
ratio of people to roomsbeds (Ramphele 1993) For township residents it is most likely
that they would be sharing these limited facilities with kin or friends rather than
complete strangers (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of hostels some men
women may adapt too well to living in single-sex hostels and would find change too
difficult to cope with (Ramphele 1993)
225 Family versus household configurations
The terms family and household are not necessarily synonymous According to the
Department of Social Development (2012) ldquoa household comprises of either (i) a
single person who makes provision(s) for hisher food or other essentials for living or (ii)
a group of at least two or more people living together who make common provision
for their food and other essentialsrdquo (White Paper on Families in South Africa 2012 11)
Moreover the Department notes that a household can contain a family yet the
members of the household are not always necessarily a family further remarking that
ldquoa household performs the functions of providing a place of dwelling and the sharing
of resources and these functions can be performed among people who are related
by blood or people without any such relationshiprdquo (White Paper on Families in South
Africa 2012 11) This distinction of family and household configurations is useful to this
study for two main reasons (a) as it has been suggested that one of the broad aims of
the hostel conversion approach is to introduce facilitate lsquofamily lifersquo and to inject a
family quality into these historically single-sex environments (b) Is it then supposed by
the Sethokga hostel conversion project that the household configurations in the
hostel are at present existing wholly in the absence of family configurations
Page | 33
It is important to be mindful of the fact that with time households have become
more complex and family structures more diffused (Mosoetsa 2011) Hostel dwellers
through years of living under space constraints and in single-sex accommodation
have developed certain ideologies practices and habits (Thurman 1997) Arguably
the hostel system redefined and reshaped family and household configurations and
constructed a complex social setting (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of male
occupied hostels relationships among men are characterised by hierarchy and
Ramphele (1993) notes that this is legitimised by lsquotraditionrsquo and is based on age
differences The older men are more likely to occupy positions of authority and be
regarded as the lsquoheadsrsquo of the household and in authority to organise the affairs of
the household Whereas the younger men would be cast in the role of attending to
duties considered lsquotypicalrsquo to women and that is the upkeep of the household ie
cleaning cooking In this lsquomanrsquos worldrsquo tradition and age regulate the day-to-day
function of the household (Ramphele 1993) The links between the men and the
families they had have left behind has arguably become increasingly scant and
incoherent (Grieger et al 2013) With the blurring of their lsquobindingrsquo reciprocal
obligations and support the conception of family life was redefined and put under
considerable strain as a result of migrant labour laws and the criminalisation of job-
seeking activity in urban areas of their rural wives partners (Segal 1991)
In both family and household configurations shared obligations and mutual support
takes many forms (Mapetla 2005) The family structure is perceived to be the
lsquocommander and regulator of the activities and conduct of the individual members
The family structure has been set apart from a household in that a household is more
of a residential unit where related andor none-related individuals in a sense lsquoeat
from the same potrsquo (Mosoetsa 2011) In some cases the individuals and members of
a household provide themselves jointly with food andor other essentials however a
household can also consist of a person who lives alone The distinguishing feature is
that a family configuration consists of people individuals who have a blood-kin
connection and this can include immediate and extended relatives but the same
does not necessarily always hold true for household configurations (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005 Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001)
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing
South Africa can still somewhat be regarded as a traditionally patrilineal society
where land and property are traced through the male lineage where upon marriage
Page | 34
a woman is required to leave her native home to reside with her husband at his home
(Mapetla 2005) This system has been more inclined to empower men (Ziehl 2001)
Subsequently within contemporary society and within the lsquonew politics of gender
relationsrsquo property and land ownership have since become a highly contentious
subject Therefore the issue of housing is quite a significant one and warrants some
reflection particularly the aspect of men and housing (Mapetla 2005)
Gender roles have steadily been changing and are increasingly becoming ill-defined
(Ziehl 2001) So how can or rather how should housing projects and interventions
such as hostel conversion projects be more gender sensitive inclusive representative
and reflective of the changing gender roles both in a social and spatial sense
Gender considerations regarding housing and housing projects need to be mindful of
the innate differentiation between men and women and their not always uniform
needs and interaction(s) with space (Mapetla 2005) The often male bias when it
comes to access to housing might just further be perpetuated through hostel
conversion projects The question here is then does this new conception of a
reconfigured living environment in the form of family units make provision(s) towards
addressing any of the housing-related gender biases What do these projects
consider important in terms of gender issues if at all how have these issues been
factored into the projects
Gender and housing related theory has often argued strongest the case of women in
their inability to access housing land the law and related funding (Ziehl 2001) The
issues of gender relations and access to housing have become increasingly topical
(Mosoetsa 2011) Womenrsquos rights access to the law resources and social amenities
have been areas which have gained a significant amount of traction in both policy
and academic circles owing to historically discriminatory laws (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005) However in South Africa and perhaps this is true for many other
societies traditionally culturally and even spiritually men are still to a significant extent
regarded as the head of household the foremost provider for their families (Mapetla
2005)
Within the context of hostels migrant labour laws which also made it a point that the
remuneration of its African labour workforce was as horrendous as the conditions they
lived in shaped a particular aspect of menrsquos relation to housing in the urban context
and their experiences (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In a study conducted by Segal
(1991) a group of men living in a hostel were interviewed to give their account of life
in the hostel According to Segal (1991) it became apparent that the men tolerated
the hostel because they felt humiliated by even the thought of losing their roles as the
Page | 35
provider for their family Some men suggested that they could and would not bring
their wives or children to the hostel for even a brief visit (Segal 1991) In their minds
they were better off alone in the citymine because the burden of their own survival
was already enormous (Segal 1991)
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy
Large sections of the South African state have continued to be institutionally
ineffective unsustainable and dysfunctional (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert 2011) Post-
1994 efforts towards nation-building and state formation in the country have taken
many forms a unitary state the inauguration of a new president of the Republic of
South Africa and the promulgation of the 1996 Constitution of the Republic(Barnet
1999) Furthermore the ideals of nation building and state formation would attempt
to diffuse into a sound and convergent form what was once opposite and adverse
(von Holdt 2010)
The housing deficit in the country was and has continued to be one of the greatest
challenges facing the government particularly the inadequate provision and access
to housing for the black majority who had been rendered destitute and occupying
dreadful accommodation (Thurman 1997) In what could better be regarded as
temporary disaster relief areas than housing suitable for any human to call lsquohomersquo
(Ramphele 1993) Post-apartheid bureaucratic inefficiency class formation
redundant budgetary rituals antagonistic attitudes towards public service vocation
and authority has greatly stifled service delivery imperatives ie social housing
provision (von Holdt 2010) Undoubtedly the role of policy towards addressing issues
such as housing and service delivery is a significant one (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert
2011) this will be discussed further in chapter four
228 The role and significance of community public participation in hostel conversion to
family unitrsquos projects
Public participation in any context is a complex and at times a contentious exercise
Academic literature on community public participation tends to presuppose an
experience or existence of informal unambiguous or authentic relations in
community participation processes (Mdunyelwa 2015) This particularly in housing
related projects and programmes with the assumption that if all the stakeholders
involved are consulted the process of participation is likely to yield positive results and
success (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) In South Africa the notion of public
Page | 36
community participation has gained popularity as a democratic practice essential
for development and nation-building (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their research project entitled ldquoA
Case Study of participation in the City Deep Hostel Redevelopmentrdquo suggests that
there are more complex and less diffused forces at play According to Benit-Gbaffou
and Mathoho (2010) the central question often becomes when and at what point
can one say people have effectively or meaningfully participated This question is
especially relevant and significance to hostel conversion projects and to efforts to re-
configure hostels as lsquofamily units suitable for family lifersquo (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010) According to state policy the hostel conversion redevelopment approach is
and has been a nation-wide intervention initiated by the post-1994 government to
redevelop convert hostels in efforts to de-stigmatise these historically-laden spaces
(Dyiki 2006) Moreover the current Minister of Human Settlement has of late stated
on a number of media platforms the hostel conversion approach also seeks to
rehabilitate these historically single-sex migrant labour compounds into family
apartmentsunits to promote a family-oriented setting (Sisulu 2015) According to a
2001 text by Statistics South Africa ldquoconverted or upgraded hostels should be treated
in the same way as a block of flats and each unit considered as a separate housing
unitrdquo (Statistics South Africa Census2001 3)
The importance and usefulness of public community participation in hostel
conversion projects have been a widely and overly debated topic However this
does not wholly take away from the fact that there are many and varied obstacles
and challenges when it comes to the actual practice and experience of
participation on the ground (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) Even while the political
and socio-economic contexts of every project are varied with different structures and
the coordination of stakeholders take on different forms (Mdunyelwa 2015) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) argue that participation has often become a political
process riddled in processes of negotiation and rampant differences of opinion
coupled with a mix of personal andor political ambitions (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010)
Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their study of the City Deep Hostel
Redevelopment Project outlined a number of issues which the project encountered
before during and after the hotel redevelopment project there included
Page | 37
Before the redevelopment process
Managing change while also trying to mitigate violence the unauthorised
occupation of tenants wanting to gain the benefits of the redevelopment project
and the allocation of units (as a contentious challenge) were cited as challenges
encountered before the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
During the process
Challenges around the design of the units (limitations and constraints with respect to
skills time and finances) the issue of labour the provision of public and social
facilities services (ie cregraveches play areas for the children) were cited as being
encountered during the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
Issues after the project
Tariff rates (with electricity as one of the biggest concerns) along with the
disagreement and discontentment around rental payments were cited as the
challenges which were encountered post the hostel redevelopment process A
central question and concern that arose focused on whether the hostel did not just
became a renovated workersrsquo hostel or if it actually did change into actual family
units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
With the study area for this research in mind I am left wondering if the issues identified
by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) are unique to the City Deep contextproject
or are they to some extent representative and reverberate to the broader
challenges and limitations of hostel conversion projects across the country Certainly
there is some value to participation when it comes to hostel conversion
redevelopment but the process of participation particularly within the context of
hostels as politically and socio-economically volatile environments will most likely be
confronted by sturdy issues of inherent sensitivities and nuances (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010) This is what Mdunyelwa (2015) decisively refers to as binary cultural
political and social structures alluding to the sentiment that some hostel dwellers are
in some respect men and women of two minds set free from the physical shackles of
oppression yet still sadly unable and ill-equipped to live and transform their thinking
well beyond that (Mdunyelwa 2015)
Page | 38
23 Conclusion
Typically the body of work that exists on hostels is unambiguously and largely
concentrated on the historically-laden context of hostels It especially articulates
issues of violent conflict and tension within hostels and their surrounding areas
Conflict situations are often captioned as hostel versus township lsquowarsrsquo There is an
important political backdrop to this which relates to the rural urban links made
mention of in this chapter
Furthermore the poor living conditions of hostels the inadequate provision of services
and social amenities should be considered The loss of family life and the sense that
hostels pose as limited spaces which is a negative reflection on to dignity of its
inhabitants are some of elements associated with the stigma of hostel life (Bonner
and Nieftagodien 2012 Ramphele 1993) This has to quite a significant extent
remained a present-day and associated reality of the hostel setting and has posed
vast challenges to hostel conversion redevelopment projects
This chapter has argued that the landscape of hostels has by and large remained
complex at times perplexing and highly contentious As a resultant the wicked
consequences of the hostel system have been many and varied but all of which
warrant due attention The theoretical backdrop on hostels has been useful in
developing themes that resonate with the case study Sethokga hostel Of particular
relevance to the case study will be role and significance of community public
participation in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Highlighting some of the
issues encountered before and during the project as the project has not yet been
completed Certain aspects of the discussion on key concepts theories arguments
and ideas and how they resonate with the case study will be explored further
Particularly the notion of bedhold the aspect of men and housing the stigma of
hostel life and the resultant consequences of the hostel system will be critically
discussed in chapter five which examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project
Page | 39
Introducing Sethokga hostel
3 Introduction
In addition to the study area this chapter will in greater detail describe and locate
Sethokga hostel It examines its local as well as municipal context and presents a
visual narrative of the hostel The aim of the visual narrative is to provide the reader
with a lsquosensersquo of the physical setting of the hostel thus to provide the reader with a
visual depiction of the multifaceted circumstance of the hostel and the complex
challenges in which its residents endure Chapter three largely seeks to provide the
reader with an impression of the context in which the Sethokga hostel conversion
project is taking place
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)
In the period between 1890 and the late 1920s Ekurhuleni (at the time referred to as
the East Rand region of the Transvaal Province) experienced increased numbers of
black male workersmigrants This was as a result of a surge in the gold mining sector
which took place on the Witwatersrand gold reefs (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
According to Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) of the 15 000 workers that were
employed in the sector some 5 000 worked in what is now called the Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality With time the number of workers in the Ekurhuleni area
continued to rise considerably most of who were oscillating migrants who were either
accommodated in labour compounds such as hostels or shanty settlements in
townships across Ekurhuleni such as Tembisa Duduza Tsakane Kwa-Thema and so
forth (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) also argue that for most of the period of the
booming mining sector in the Witwatersrand reef to well into the countryrsquos
democratic dispensation political contention in hostels had long been a common
feature throughout the region As a consequence hostels and a number of the
townships in Ekurhuleni have somewhat continued to exist within a circumstance of
deep-seated antagonistic political and socio-economic conditions (Bonner and
Nieftagodien 2012)
Sethokga hostel is one of the largest hostels in the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan region
according to the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis Study in 2014 there
Page | 40
were approximately 12 120 residents living in the hostel (Demacon 2014) Of that
roughly 4 000 have since the beginning of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
been relocated or reallocated within other blocks in the hostel to make way for the
construction of the family units (Demacon 2014) Some of the relocations of residents
have been to alternative sites outside the hostel to either Enhlanzeni hostel or
Vusimuzi hostel both situated in the Tembisa area (Demacon 2014)Interestingly
Enhlanzeni as well as Vusimizi hostels are also experiencing issues of overcrowding
poor living conditions and similar socio-economic conditions to Sethokga Moreover
neither Enhlanzeni nor Vusimuzi hostel have or are undergoing upgrading
conversion It was not clear in the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis
Study what the reasons for relocating the residents of Sethokga to these hostels were
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni hostel and
Vusimuzi hostel
Source Demacon 2014
Page | 41
311 Geographic description of the study
Sethokga hostel was built in 1980 and much like other hostels across the country the
Sethokga hostel was badly designed poorly built and has been suffering years of
neglect Sethokga hostel is a public sector type hostel and is owned by the
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Sethokga was built to accommodate male
migrant labourers from a range of industries (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Similar to
numerous other hostels men could live in the hostel so long as they had work in
industries but wives partners and families were prohibited from residence (Thurman
1997) They were entitled only to short-term visiting permits Regular and violent raids
which were carried out by authorities during the day and at night would rigorously
enforce these regulations to chase away arrest or bus back the wives partners and
families of the men back to the homelands (Thurman 1997)
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi initially the hostel
accommodated a lsquomixturersquo of residents black men across all tribes and ethnicities
but he recalls the change that occurred in the 1990s in response to political shifts He
recalls that ldquoafter the release of Mandela and when they started preaching lsquothis
thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions happened according to who was Zulu or
Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Below the ward
councillor explains what he saw as some of the factors that led to what is currently
the strong predominance of Pedi and Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel
suggesting that ldquoThere were mixed feeling when talks were rife concerning
negotiations that could lead to possible elections because the IFP (Inkatha Freedom
Party) was rejecting such a notion At the time it was a situation of the Zulursquos terrorizing
the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa and standing with the white man The
Zulursquos did not like such an idea which caused a divide among the Zulu and Xhosa
This led to conflict between the Xhosa and the Zulu There was fighting everywhere in
the country and you found some Pedis Venda and Tsongarsquos ran away from certain
hostels because they were being chased out and some landed up in Sethokga (
Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) The points made by Cllr Mohlapamaswi flag some
interesting points for instance that this hostel in some respect played the role of a
place of refuge and might affect how residents view it
Sethokga hostel is situated on approximately 22 hectares of land and consists of 29 U-
shaped single and two storey dormitories but mainly consists of the two storey walk-up
dormitories (Demacon 2014) The hostel lies on medium dolomitic soil despite this it
has been said and reported that over the years this has not had a significant impact
Page | 42
on much of the structural qualities of the hostel (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) The
structural sturdiness of the hostel is said to have been mitigated through precautions
such as drainage and the assembly of lsquowellrsquo positioned pavements (Demacon 2014)
According to the ward councillor there are a few women and children living in the
hostel although it is not quite clear how many They are however not recognised as
lsquolegitimatersquo residence of Sethokga (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Arguably a
number of the hostel redevelopment conversion projects that have taken place
across the country have been as a response to the prevailing presence of women
and children who had come to live in the hostel The fact that this hostel has
remained predominantly male occupied presents a number contextual dimensions
to the hostel conversion project This will be explored in chapter five which will
examine the conceptualisation of the hostel conversion project
According to Thurman (1997) it is not uncommon in hostels for up to three families to
live in one room measuring 20 square metres Such rooms were designed to
accommodate two to three workers or even up to twenty people to share a sink a
shower and toilet (Thurman 1997) Yet lsquowholersquo families ie husbands wives children
or extended families have not moved into Sethokga Overcrowding remains a
concern and privacy is scarce in the hostel (Demacon 2014) The dormitories have
very limited physical space and little room for manoeuvre The typical floor plan of a
hostel is provided on the next page and depicts the rigid rudimentary and restrained
design of the hostel compound Sethokga hostel has identical floor plans and
elevations
Page | 43
Floor plan of a typical dormitory compound
Source Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
Figure 1 Ground Floor Plan
Figure 2 First Floor Plan
Figure 3 Elevation
Page | 44
312 Locality
The hostel is situated in the East Rand region of the Gauteng province within the
municipal administrative jurisdiction of the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (EMM)
in the Kempton Park ndash Tembisa Customer Care Area It is located in the north-eastern
region region B of the EMM in the township of Tembisa and lies to the south of the
Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and to the east of the City of Johannesburg
Moreover the hostel is lies between the Kempton Park Pretoria railway link near
Oakmoor station thus a multipurpose and inter-as well as intra-regional public
transport node It is well serviced in terms of public transport and easily accessible
from the R21 (Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
Map 2 Locality map
Source Google maps 2015
Source EkurhuleniGIS 2015
Page | 45
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex
313 Local and municipal context
Tembisa is one of the largest townships in the metro and it is situated in region A of the
EMM towards the north-western end of the municipality The hostel lies in ward four of
the metro to the east of Midrand and to the west of one of the most affluent suburbs
in region A Glen Marais along with other high income areas such as Serengeti Golf
Estate Midstream and the suburb of Edenvale (Demacon 2014)
The Integrated Development Plan (IDP) for the Oakmoor area Area 19 of the metrorsquos
Local Integrated Development Plan (LIDP) was last prepared in 2000 The report
contained among its leading aims to establish an integrated framework to guide and
facilitate development interventions in the area (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000) It was documented in the report that the SDP would guide the
Page | 46
municipalityrsquos decisions in the development and management of the area in a way
that the report articulates as follows by encouraging and setting the framework for
private sector investment and initiatives and by seeking to strengthen economic
activity in the area through the identification of specific projects and programmes
which would kick-start development and lastly working towards improving service
delivery (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) The report reviews the
historically context of the area and argues that basically no provision was made for
service delivery or the adequate management of land and no consideration of land
use imperatives was given This was the case throughout the Tembisa Township (SJN
Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Furthermore the report established that the general land-use pattern across most of
the township was mainly comprised of residential developments It was in this 2000
Integrated Development Plan that it was overtly and in retrospect alluded to that
Tembisa had been established to function at that time as a dormitory settlement for
the neighbouring economic centres of the East Rand region such as Kempton Park
Olifantsfontein and Midrand (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
An abstract in 2000 SDF report(SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000 stated
the following that investigations had confirmed that the Sethokga hostel buildings
were structurally sound except for some weather proofing of external walls and basic
finishes to walls floors and ceiling Some repair work to cracks and precautions to pre-
empt future cracking may be necessary but the hostel blocks would offer little
difficulty in terms of conversion into single and family units According to the report
there seemed to be more problems with engineering services For example the
internal sewer reticulation was said to be so dilapidated that it may have needed to
be replaced entirely Parts of the water supply network would need to be replaced
fire hydrants installed electricity supply upgraded and grading of roads and storm-
water disposal required substantial attention (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
When the completed report was presented in 2000 it set out a case that the
municipality was currently negotiating with a non-profit organisation to acquire hostel
land and convert the hostel buildings into single and family units and manage such
housing stock (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) It further documented
that the lsquoultimatersquo number of dwelling units would be about 1200 with the first phase
of development to deliver 500 units The report suggested that the development
would be undertaken by an external organisation and that few planning guidelines
Page | 47
would need to be proposed to harmonize Sethokga hostel residential complex with
the rest of the Tembisa Township In the report it is assumed that the hostel conversion
would should result in a lsquosecurity complexrsquo type of housing development and
access to the complex would be gained mainly from local distributors such as the
extension of MbizaIzimbongi Street and Nyarhi Street (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000)
The report argued for change in the household profile of the hostel and this would
result in an increased demand for additional social facilities such as schools cregraveches
churches libraries play area(s) etc It was found in the report that space intensive (in
terms of size) social facilities eg cregraveches and a multipurpose centre should be
encouraged within the complex (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Additionally limited retail specifically corner shops should be established within the
complex Lastly the report suggested that it was important to align the services in the
area with the rest of the EMM and ensure adequate capacity at points where the
services connected into the hostel Roads in particular were highlighted as important
in this regard to ensure continuity and appropriate distribution of traffic movement
What is more the report states that traffic should be discouraged within the new
settlement (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
The SDF marked the entire Sethokga hostel complex as lsquohostel upgradingrsquo married to
public open space within the vicinity of the complex churches sports fields and
mixed use areas were proposed in the SDF (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
Page | 48
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework (SDF) 2000
The development proposals in the 2000 Oakmoor area19 SDF proposed that Sethokga hostel be
Redeveloped into family units The SDF also proposed mixed use nodal developments within and around
the Oakmoor area and proposed additional facilities such as cregraveches schools and recreational
facilities in certain areas
Source SJN Development Planning Consultants Planning Area 19 Oakmoor Development
Plan Development Proposals Final Report 2000
This SDF for the area is quite old and has not been updated
since this 2000 plan
Sethokga
hostel
Page | 49
There are 22 hostels across Ekurhuleni which are spread across six regions in the metro
(Demacon 2014) Region A has two hostels of which one is government owned
region B has three hostels of which government owns two regions C D and E hosts
one hostel respectively while region F has sixteen hostels (it is not clear how many are
owned by government) (Demacon 2014)
In terms of social facilities and amenities the study area is situated within a 3km radius
from two schools Rabasotho Combined School and Philena Middle School It is also
within a 2km radius from a healthcare facility - Esselen Park Satellite Clinic - and within
a 1km radius from a sporting facility - Esselen Park Sports School of Excellence
(Demacon 2014) The nearest police station is roughly 6km away and a lsquogenerousrsquo
number of shopping as well as entertainment centres are found within a 15 to 20km
radius of the hostel The nearest taxi route is less than 100m with the nearest train
stations including the Tembisa Limindlela and Kaalfontein stations all falling within a
10km radius (Demacon 2014)
In 2013 the Tembisa economy contributed 83 to the overall economy of the EMM
whilst Ekurhuleni contributed 253 to the overall economy of the Gauteng province
in 2013 (Demacon 2014) Sethokga hostel forms part of the Kempton Park Tembisa
precinct and according the Sethokga Hostels Mixed Typology Market Analysis Report
it falls within the development context of the Kempton Park Tembisa precinct It hosts
a range of housing typologies supported under various housing programmes
(Demacon 2014) which include but are not limited to Informal Settlement Upgrading
programmes and projects Integrated Residential Development Programmes(s) and
Gap Market Housing Units According to this report there also exists several
opportunities for the development of medium to higher density residential
developments (Demacon 2014) The EMMs 2010 Metropolitan Spatial Development
Framework suggests that among the several intentions of the metro the EMM will seek
to expand the affordable housing market and that it will seek to accommodate a
wider range of the metrorsquos populace by making a range of housing options available
for people across different income groupings (Demacon 2014)
This next section exhibits the lsquoambiencersquo of Sethokga hostel as it currently stands It
delves into some detail regarding the current setting of the hostel and takes the
reader through the authorrsquos experience being in the hostel and lsquotravellingrsquo through its
narrow corridors It shares my experience of going into this dauntingly male
dominated environment riddled with metaphorical tones of disempowerment
despondency and neglect All the images displayed here were taken by the author
Page | 50
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel
In terms of its infrastructure the hostel is said to still be somewhat structurally sound
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005) Aesthetically however it appears quite old and rundown
and leaves a lot to be desired The neglected state of refuse and rubble removal
adds to the wear and tear appearance of the hostel Each of the blocks that make-
up the hostel consists of separate dormitories and entry into each dormitory is gained
through a common access point - a door - that leads into a communal area with a
basic cooking and dining area There are no ceilings in any of the dormitories The
paint-work both inside and outside has long worn out In general the hostel appears
especially dull and unsightly
321 Built form architecture
Figure 4
The hostel is old and run-down
The adjoining hostel blocks are lined with a
number of lsquoinformalrsquo traders
This area that leads into one of the hostel
blocks is where a resident displays his goods
for selling
Page | 51
A number of the men have cars which they
park in their respective blocks
Walk-up that leads into one of the dorms
that is later photographed and shows the
condition of the interior of the hostel
The hostel is in an obvious state of neglect
and refuse removal is ignored
I spotted a number of chickens roaming about
in the hostel and a small vegetable garden
near one of the entrances into a dorm
There is one entry and exit point into most of
the blocks in the hostel
Page | 52
Figure 5
This is a communal cooking area It was said
that because the stove is so old and has a
number of issues the electricity powering the
stove is never turned off and so it runs
constantly through the day and night time
The area next to the cooking area is where
groceries and other goods are stored for
safe-keeping
This communal dining area also leads into
the rest of the dorm and the place where the
hostel dwellers sleep
None of the dorms have ceilings or any
added furnishings (ie lighting) The hostel
has never been re-painted or renovated
since it was built in the early 1980s
Page | 53
This corridor leads into the bedrooms where
the men sleep Sheets andor curtains lead to
what felt like very restricted distressing and
unpleasent living quarters
The compartments offer very limited room to
move around and offer little privacy There
are two beds per compartment with up to
three people sharing a bed The living
conditions are as what Ramphele (1993)
described as constraining to varying degrees
since it is a physically restricted environment
with blurred boundaries of personal private
space The physical proximity to others offers
practically no prospect for privacy or liberty
to accommodate visitors
Page | 54
Figure 6
322 Municipal amenities
Male urinal
Communal toilet
Communal shower
Most of the hostel blocks in the hostel have
electricity yet it seems to be offered for
free
The entrance (door) leading to the one
communal shower and toilet facility There is
one bathroom per dorm
Page | 55
Figure 7
323 The adjoining area
Most of the blocks in the hostels have
communal indoor as well as outdoor taps
with running water provided without
charge
lsquoInformalrsquo activity trade takes place in
and around the hostel
The council offices are situated adjacent to
one of the hostel blocks across the street
The municipality does not collect refuse in
the hostel so it is up to the hostel residents to
dispose of their refuse (it was not clear why
the municipality did not collect refuse in the
hostel)
Page | 56
According to the (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) entry and access to the hostel are
determined by ones ability to negotiate for a bed Much like what was described by
Ramphele (1993) the closest likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo in hostels was in the form
of a bed this persists at Sethokga To some extent every aspect of life and survival in
Sethokga revolves around a bed
One gains entry into Sethokga through a block chairperson (Sololo interview 2015)
Some of the functions and responsibilities of these block chairpersonrsquos is to know what
is happening in that particular hostel block The illustration given by the economic
representative for the ward Mr Sololo was that
ldquoWhatever which has been happening in a particular block the chairperson
should be aware of it and should call a meeting Letrsquos say if you are sitting in a
block here and you have got a jukebox and you find that you are selling
liquor and now they tell you that by 10 orsquoclock you close down and the music
should be off Then you do not comply with that the block chairperson will
report you to the hostel committee and they will sit and come up with a fine
for you if you do not listen even after they fine you they will chase you out of
the hostelrdquo
According to Sololo interview (2015) the block chairpersons maintain peace and
order and need to ensure that any conflict is mediated They are elected by the
residents of a given block and are entrusted with their grievances Ideally they should
be first point of contact before anything is to be escalated to the ward councillor ie
if a pipe bursts and they are without water This would need to be reported to the
EMM by either the block chairperson and if the problem remains unresolved it is then
escalated to the ward councillor (Sololo interview 2015)
33 Conclusion
Chapter three has explored a number of elements which model the status quo of the
study field Ironically the conditions in the hostel are not much different to many of
the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg Sethokga hostel also resembles
many other hostels across the country The hostel is overcrowded there is little room
to manoeuvre and there is an obvious lack of privacy The hostel is a possible health
hazard to those who live in it
Page | 57
This chapter shared some of my own experience of the hostel My experience consisted out
of being in the hostel taking photographs in and around the hostel and engaging with the
living environment Inside the hostel I was engulfed by its narrow poorly lit and what felt like
stifling corridors Corridors divided by curtains and sheets led into what were very confined
sleeping compartments Beds offer a place of rest for those who have voluntarily or
involuntarily sought refuge in the hostel Many after all consider the hostels as a lsquobetterrsquo
alternative to homelessness The experience for me was unlike any I have ever felt since the
circumstance of my life has provided a certain comfort that was surely challenged in the
modest time that I spent at Sethokga Chapter four examines what has been the states
approach to hostel conversion
Page | 58
The statesrsquo approach to hostel conversion
4 Introduction
The discussion in this chapter will reflect and review South African state policy post-1994
that concerns hostels Chapter four will also critically discuss and describe the
fundamentals of what have been considered two of the leading approaches to hostel
redevelopment conversion namely the Hostel Redevelopment Programmes (HRP) and
the Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach
There have been a number of state interventions post-1994 that have seemingly been a
lsquosignrsquo of governments lsquodesirersquo to improve the living conditions of not just hostel residents
but of a vast majority of South Africanrsquos who were subjected to poor living conditions
(Thurman 1997) However for the purpose of this study there will be particular focus on
interventions around hostels In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005) concur with a few
other authors that during post democracy the South African government introduced
along with other housing programmes a hostel upgrading conversion programme
aimed primarily at converting hostels into integrated family-oriented developments
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
South Africarsquos housing policy was launched in 1994 and the housing subsidy scheme
promised to deliver one million houses in five years (UrbanLankMark 2011) This would be
delivered through a range of subsidy mechanisms (UrbanLankMark 2011) According to
Dyiki interview(2015) in 1995 or about 1996 a National Hostel Redevelopment Policy was
approved and was among one of the primary national housing programmes (Dyiki
interview 2015) To facilitate nation-building and effective state formation it was believed
that social programmes such as state funded housing programmes would play a pivotal
role in this regard (Netshitenzhe 2011) Moreover the nation-building agenda saw the
government set the country bold and far-reaching goals and these somewhat became
associated with certain policies ideologies and norms (Netshitenzhe 2011) However
redundant budgetary rituals inadequate feasibility studies weak project evaluation
bureaucratic inefficiency managing community expectations and political interference
have been some of the issues that have held back progress (von Holdt 2010 and
Pienaar 2010) As a result housing provided by government has often been poorly
Page | 59
located and in some respect it has continued to perpetuate a reality of spatial
segregation (Charlton et al 2014)
This next section will describe how the hostel conversion approach has been articulated
through state policy through subsequent grants and schemes
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach
Through the provision of grants and schemes government has made efforts to provide
funding for the redevelopment conversion of hostels However there has been
somewhat of a bias on public sector hostels as the grants are provided mainly for the
redevelopment conversion of hostels owned by municipalities or provincial government
(Department of Human Settlements 2015) In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
provide a synopsis of some of governmentsrsquo earliest approaches to addressing lsquothe hostel
issuersquo (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) This is summarised as follows
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Peoples Housing Process
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme (this will be discussed in
section 42)
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Arguably the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units
Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of state efforts to grapple with the vast
challenges around hostels hostel life and the social ills that have become endemic to
hostels (Dyiki 2006) The essence of the approaches listed below was that hostels would
be redeveloped converted to create sustainable human living conditions To re-
integrated these hostel communities into the surrounding township communities (Pienaar
and Cloete 2005)
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership was premised on
the notion that Developers this could also include the municipality would be able to
submit project proposals for the development of housing on stands that were serviced for
people who qualified in terms of eligibility criteria eg a combined household income of
Page | 60
the beneficiary versus the available subsidy amount provided by the state Households
would then be required to contribute to the development (that is the construction of their
house) from their own savings or through what was referred to as lsquosweet equityrsquo
(providing their own material and labour) Locational and geographic factors would also
affect the amount of the subsidy by 2005 Pienaar and Cloete (2005) noted that this
subsidy had delivered an approximate 13 million homes which were primarily low-cost
free-standing
In the case of hostels redevelopment one option was that the subsidy could be used to
build new free-standing dwellings for individual full title ownership on unused portions of
land within hostel complexes This option would require sub-division of the land as well as
the installation of additional service Under the provisions of the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme another option would be to convert existing dormitories into family
apartments that could be sold off to beneficiaries under sectional title This sectional title
is a form of ownership where an individual holds title to a dwelling unit it can be a free-
standing unit or part of a multi-unit storey building The individual owns title together
with all the other owners of sectional dwellings on that property an undivided share of the
land on which the dwellings are built (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) However the challenge
was that where existing dormitories were converted and sold under title the projects
would be exposed to a host of problems that sectional title properties generally
encountered in low-income areas in the private sector ie poor management and
maintenance and difficulties in collecting levies and service debts (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process
The Peoplersquos Housing Process was reportedly introduced to enable communities
particularly those in disadvantaged areas to participate in the provision of their own
housing without the participation interference or involvement of private developers
However technical and administrative support and consultation would be offered by
Housing Support Organisations which were approved to serve this function (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005) What were termed as facilitation grants would be made available by the
government to lsquokick-startrsquo the housing projects The beneficiaries could apply for a grant
to pay for the services rendered by the Housing Support Organisation(s) and the housing
subsidy would be the same as for what was contained in the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) hostel residents could as a
community collective make use of this avenue as a means of obtaining ownership of an
improved residence with the assistance of their local authority a non-governmental
Page | 61
organisation (NGO) or perhaps a cluster of professions who could provide support and
administrative assistance as their Housing Support Organisation (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing was introduced in 1995 and was essentially a
variant of the project-linked subsidy provided to non-profit institutions independent of
government and registered as legally approved entities Households earning less than
R3500 per month would be provided through this subsidy with subsidised rental housing
by these entities In 1995 when the subsidy was introduced it carried a once-off capital
grant of R16 000 per dwelling but by 2002 the amount had increased to R27 000 as part of
the governmentrsquos aspiration to promote medium density housing Pienaar and Cloete
(2005) note that because the hostel redevelopment programme had been in limbo for
several years at the time of their study the Institutional Subsidy approach had been
considered as a viable alternative to accelerate hostel conversion projects The tenure
options under this subsidy it was proposed would include
Rental
Co-operative ownership
An instalment sale option in the form of a lsquorent to buyrsquo practice with a
minimum rental period of four years to qualify for the conversion to ownership
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Under the National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
the National Housing Code (for subsidised housing) delineates subsidised housing as
Permanent residential structures that have security of tenure both internal
and external privacy
Housing that has portable water serviced with adequate energy and sanitary
facilities
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing were set
to give effect to the objectives of the Housing Act 1997 which came into effect on 1 April
Page | 62
1998 To ensure quality and durable housing products that complied with particular
minimum standards (National Housing Report 2009) For instance dwellings had to have
a minimum gross floor area of 30m2 but this has since been amended (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005)
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country
Some international interest has been generated to consider intervention in hostels and
efforts to redevelopingconverting hostels The point of this section is to illustrate that
hostels occupied and in some respect have continued to occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are one of many representations of
the physical manifestation of three centuries of systematic racial discrimination and
economic exploitation (Thurman 1997) The consolidation of the migrant labour system
through hostels the poor living conditions of hostels the dishonour of hostel life and the
control they exert on the African populace Saw hostels gaining the attention of a
number of international agencies and authorities who put resources towards and took an
interest in reconfiguring the disposition of hostels (Dyiki interview 2015)
In the period between August 2002 and April 2003 the USAID (United States Agency for
International Development) extended its support to community based approaches to
housing in South Africa and in turn created a platform where it would have input(s) into
South Africarsquos national housing policy (Urban Sector Network 2003)
Hostel redevelopment was supported under a grant provision provided by the USAID this
had two main objectives The first was that policy and information dissemination should
serve as key objectives and secondly that USAID would have a voice in the facilitation of
hostel redevelopments Initially the grant was meant to run from 23 August 2000 to 30
August 2002 but an extension was requested and the grant extended for the period 1
September 2002 to 30 April 2003 (Urban Sector Network 2003) Additionally the on-goings
of the programme instituted under the grant were to include the following activities
Identifying and conducting research into tenure options and feasible
management models for hostels
Identifying possible needs and challenges and to then conduct nation-wide
research in the hostel sector
Facilitating workshops and consolidating policy submissions and to submit
research papers to the Department of Housing
Page | 63
To publish research papers
To conduct mid-term and final evaluation of the programme
Conducting information outreaches where the USN (Urban Sector Network) would
play an essential role in informing government the private sector as well as
communities about the opportunities which could be created through the
redevelopment of hostels (Urban Sector Network2003)
The Urban Sector Network (USN) then proceeded to make specific recommendations on
the hostel redevelopment approach The USN called for the broadening on the scope of
the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme to include all hostels (private and
grey sector) and not just public sector hostel Recommendations were made that the
norms and standards for the redeveloped hostels should be developed along with
national guidelines for the management of redeveloped hostels by local authorities They
advocated for stronger support for co-operative housing The redevelopment of hostels
to be approached in an integrated and holistic manner and hostels should not be
redeveloped in an isolated manner The subsidy amount for hostels redevelopment and
social facilitation needed to be increased Lastly that hostels redevelopment should
support livelihood strategies and capacity building and training of hostel residents during
the redevelopment process was essential (Urban Sector Network 2003)
The USN proposed a departure from the public sector hostel redevelopment bias of the
Hostel Redevelopment plan (Urban Sector Network 2003)
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme (HRP)
In principal the Hostel Redevelopment Programme supported an unambiguous bias in
favour of public sector hostels (Dyiki 2006) Public sector hostels are those hostels
owned by either provincial or local authorities that offered accommodation to workers
from a range of industries (Thurman 1997) Grey sector hostels (in which the structures
wereare owned by private companies but the land by a provincial or local authority
and private sector hostels) did not form part of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme
(Dyiki 2006) The biggest limitation and challenge of the HRP was in its narrow focus on
solely the conversion of hostels beds (Thurman 1997) The aim of the HRP was to provide
a subsidy allocation that was based per bed but it was criticised as being impractical
and unfeasible and not adequately addressing the issue of housing provision (Dyiki
2006) Dyiki interview (2015) believes that the challenge of the HRP was that it was not
talking to individuals but rather it was a subsidy given to the state to improve the hostel
and the standard of living in the hostel Since most of the public sector hostels were
Page | 64
managed by the municipalities the municipalities received the subsidy and the
residents of the hostels therefore had very little say in how the subsidy could in effect be
used The other challenge was that grey sector and public sector hostels were not part
of the subsidy (Dyiki interview 2015)
The Hostel Redevelopment Programme was perhaps the earliest strategy conceived by
the South African government as a national policy aiming to
Promote habitable and humane conditions in hostel conversions
Ensure the involvement of hostel residents the surroundingneighbouring
community and relevant (publicprivate) authorities and any other entity
affected by the project are involved in the decision-making processes
Facilitate and promote social integration within hostel communities and the
hostels and adjacent communities
Put measures in place to accommodate any persons displaced by the hostel
conversion project
Empower promote economic development and seeks to be development-
oriented
According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment
Programme was largely based on the premise that this programme would make some
provisions for grant funding from the central government towards the conversion or
upgrading of hostels particularly public sector or grey-sector hostels This will be done with
the broad aim of the programme to facilitate and create living conditions for residents
that are humane and hygienic by providing prospects for housing options that are
affordable and sustainable With tenure options for
Rental
Possible ownership for those at the lower income scale
Upon its conception a capital subsidy of R16 000 was initially proposed per family or R4
000 per individual Additionally to be eligible for this programme hostel redevelopment
programmes would need to be
Planned and implemented in a participative and comprehensive manner
with the requirement that interest groups would need to be established
Based on socio-economic studies undertaken to determine and consider the
needs and affordability aspect of those who would be affected (ie stand to
benefit from the project)
Page | 65
Unfailing in ensuring that there is no displacement of residents unless
alternative accommodation is provided
Sustainable with regards to the on-going payments of maintenance and any
other related costs
Purposeful to augment employment opportunities for the hostel residents as
well as the locals in the construction and on-going maintenance of the
project
The broad aim of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme (Mdunyelwa 2015) was to
convert these historically male-occupied spaces which were also subsequently meant
for migrant labourers to family units But it will be done in such a way to able and
capacitate the accommodation of the families of these men In some way but perhaps
not explicitly stated in the Hostel Redevelopment Programme policy brief there is an
element of urbanisation that is implied Therefore it was an attempt to somewhat
encourage the men to relocate their families from their rural home-base (Mdunyelwa
2015)
The shortcomings of the HRP in how it had a restricted focus on hostel beds and
somewhat of an oversight on the complexity of the configuration of hostels saw it being
replaced by the Community Residential Units Programme (CRU) (Pienaar 2010) Dyiki
interview (2015) in my interview with him argued that the CRU Programme unlike the HRP
contains a lot more detail that was perhaps missed in the HRP He further suggested that
the CRU Programme could be considered somewhat of a lsquocost recoveryrsquo strategy by
government to recoup some of the monies spent on these projects As the CRU
programme has a strong rental housing stock component to it (Dyiki interview 2015)
44 The Community Residential Units Programme (CRU Programme)
The Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme has since replaced the National
Hostel Redevelopment Programme At the time of this study there are approximately
2000 public hostels across the country with a vast majority of them still needing to be
afforded some attention and measures to redevelop them (Demacon 2014) According
to the Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the CRU Programme (2006)
the CRU Programme aims to facilitate the provision of secure and stable rental tenure for
lower income persons Furthermore stating that the programme seeks to provide a
framework for addressing the many and varied forms of existing public sector residential
accommodation as the previous approach under the HRP only considered a ldquoper-bedrdquo
Page | 66
approach that proved unfavourable on a number of occasions (CRU Programme Policy
Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme is believed to provide a lsquobetterrsquo suited programme and a coherent
framework to assist in dealing with a vast range of public stock which has for the most
part been indecisively and incomprehensively dealt with (Demacon 2014) The CRU
Programme targets low income individuals as well as households with an average R 3500
monthly income and who have not been able to find suitable accommodation
According to the CRU Programme in the years leading up to 2006 there was an
approximate 4512 of households nationally which fall within the R0-R800 income groups
currently renting and an approximate 4027 falling within the R801 ndash R3200 income
groups (CRU Programme Policy Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme intends to cover the following areas
a) Public hostels that are owned by Provincial Housing Departments and municipalities
b) ldquoGreyrdquo hostels which are hostel that have both a public and private ownership
component due to historical reasons
c) Public housing stock that forms part of the ldquoEnhanced Extended Discount Benefit
Schemerdquo but which cannot be transferred to individual ownership and has to be
managed as rental accommodation by the public owner
d) Post-1994 newly developed public residential accommodation owned by provincial
housing departments and municipalities
e) Existing dysfunctional abandoned andor distressed buildings in inner city or township
areas that have been taken over by a municipality and funded by housing funds
(Department of Human Settlements 2015)
The CRU programme policy document is quite a laborious document In general the CRU
programme seeks to promote and advance the provision of rental options for lower
income groups facilitate communication and participation of residents throughout the
process provide a variety of rental stock and provide secure and stable rental stock This
will be done by what the CRU Programme articulates as providing a realistic funding
programme (Department of Human Settlements 2015)
According to the CRU programme rental stock provided by the programme is to be
owned by either a provincial housing department or a municipality However this has
been a seriously contested position on the part of the individuals and households
affected by the programme who want home ownership (Dyiki interview 2015)
Page | 67
45 Conclusion
There have been a number of projects over the past several years which have in part
articulated the states aspiration to reconfigure the lsquoway of lifersquo in hostels The Hostel
Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units Programme are
considered to have been the leading approaches to reconfiguring hostels within the
countryrsquos broader landscape Whether hostels have or do not have a place in
democratic South Africa is part of what this study is looking to explore
Chapter five introduces the Sethokga hostel conversion project and in principal seeks to
unpack the conceptualisation of the project while reflecting on the findings of the
interviews
Page | 68
The Sethokga hostel conversion project
5 Introduction
Chapter five will examine the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seek to unpack
how the project has been conceptualised Discussing the main components of the
project its main stakeholders the project phases exploring what are its defining
characteristics the broad vision and aim of the project how the project has understood
the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn set to address them and then also
in what way(s) the residents of the hostel have been involved in the project Furthermore
this chapter will examine what the project considers important in terms of gender issues
what have been some limitations of the project while it also considers what the
anticipated impact and benefit of the project is
Lastly and in view of the interviews that were conducted chapter five discusses how the
residents of the hostel and the community of Tembisa and greater Ekurhuleni will know
that the project has been completed and has been successful By and large this chapter
offers testament of the findings from the field work and reviews the rationale of the
Sethokga conversion project To conclude this chapter a collage of diagrams and
images will be presented to provide the reader with greater insight(s) into the Sethokga
hostel conversion project
51 Outline of the main components of the project
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project
There have been a number of stakeholders involved in the Sethokga hostel conversion
project the main stakeholders include
o The Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement (GPDHS)
o LTE Consulting
o The Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
o The ward councillor and various community committees and leaders
o The Sethokga Hostel residents
o The community of Tembisa
Page | 69
The roles of the stakeholders are summarised as follows National government is the key
funder of the Sethokga hostel conversion project the funds are transferred to the GPDHS
who have to then ensure that the costs of the project are managed LTE Consulting is a
consulting company appointed by the GPDHS for the oversight and construction of the
Sethokga hostel conversion project They work in collaboration with the EMM (the local
authority) and its various departments such as the services department the energy
department quality assurance etc However the GPDHS remains the lsquomain decision-
makerrsquo and lsquocustodianrsquo of the project with the lead oversight on the budget and
programmeproject management The project manager Mr Sisa Majikijela is the official
from the GPDHS that is directly responsible for supervision and coordination of the
project The ward councillor and the various community committees leaders facilitate
avenues of communication and engagement between the officials (from province the
EMM and LTE) with the residents of Sethokga and community lsquoAs the eyes and ears on
the groundrsquo (Majikijela interview 2015) ideally the ward councillor and various
community committees leaders have an important role to play in ensuring that the
Sethokga residents and community will be the rightful recipients of the project The
Sethokga hostel residents and broader community have a vested interest in the project
because it stands to affect andor benefit them (Sololo interview2015)
Once the project is completed with the family units fully constructed (ie with furnishings
such as trees plants parking bays and so forth) and the services installed The project will
be handed over to the EMM for on-going administration maintenance and the
collection of rentals (Shibambo interview 2015) The Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlement in collaboration with the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and LTE
Consulting play a key role as facilitates of the conversion of Sethokga hostel into family
units (Majikijela interview 2015)
522 Project phases
The data regarding the project phases was easily accessible and generously provided by
the consulting resident engineer and the architect providing me with a market analysis
study and a few other key documents The development concept of the hostel
conversion project divides the project into three phases and further subdivides each of
the phases into two phases phases A and B (Demacon 2014)
Initial studies (ie pre-feasibility studies) were done in 2008 but the demolition of the first
four blocks of the hostel demolished for the current phase 1A only took place in August of
2011 and it was anticipated that phase 1A would be completed and handed over to the
Page | 70
municipality by the end of 2014 but this did not happen (Majikijela interview 2015) At the
time of conducting fieldwork between the months of August and September 2015 it was
said that phase 1A was near completion with just the landscaping parking and water
provision left to completed (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
Phase 1A of the project was meant to bring to completion a total of 240 units
accommodating 1 194 people to provide 69 parking bays (one per four units) a total of
54 one bedroom units 117 two bedroom units and 69 three bedroom units at an average
unit size of 324m2 477m2 and 588m2 for the one two and three bedrooms respectively
(Demacon 2014) However only a total of 222 units have been built and this shortfall was
largely attributed to the underlying dolomite geological conditions of the site (Bako and
Shibambo interview 2015)
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
The Sethokga hostel conversion project has been administered under the CRU
programme and forms part of a national agenda to convert hostels into family units
(Dyiki interview 2015) The target group under the CRU programme is individuals and
households earning between R800 and R3 500 per month who are able to enter what the
CRU programme has termed the lsquoformal private rental and social housing marketrsquo
(Demacon 2014)
The new residential units (the family units) are situated on ervan 128 and 5729 of the
Sethokga complex within the administrative jurisdiction of the Kempton Park Customer
Care Area (CCA) which is the administrative body conducting oversight of development
and town planning affairs for the Tembisa and Kempton Park areas (Demacon 2014)
The family units are three storey walk-ups and appear somewhat spacious and far more
appealing than the hostel structures The CRU proposes that bachelorsone bedroom
units of 20m2 to 35m2 should be allocated at a monthly rental of R270 ndash R450 a two
bedroom unit of 35m2-45m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R450 to R850 and
that a three bedroom unit of 45m2-80m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R850 ndash
R1650 Rentals have been and remain a contestation in a number of hostel conversion
projects across the country and Sethokga is no different According to the economic
representative for the ward Sololo interview (2015) the residents of Sethokga hostel are
contesting that they want to pay R150 for a one bedroom unit R200 for a two bedroom
unit and R300 for a three bedroom unit
According to the principles of the CRU programme the ownership of the rental housing
stock is to be reserved by either the Gauteng Provincial Department of Human
Page | 71
Settlement (GPDHS) or the EMM The ownership of the family units can be transferred by
the GPDHS to the EMM in line with the Housing Act no right(s) of ownership can be
transferred to tenants (Pienaar 2010)
The process of the Sethokga hostel conversion has on an administrative and government
support level been facilitated through a grant allocation from national government to
province (GPDHS) This grant has made provisions for pre-feasibility studies
socialcommunity facilitation the relocationreallocation of some residents (within the
hostel or to alternative sites to make way for demolition and construction of phase 1A)
and the consideration and compensation of construction costs and professional fees
(Majikijela interview 2015) The allocation of the units determining rental structures
applying indigent relief measures where necessary rental collection and maintenance
as well as the management of the family units are factors determined by the GPDHS and
the EMM cooperatively (Sololo interview 2015) The hostel residents are then at some
level consulted and lsquoencouragedrsquo to participate in this regard (Dyiki interview 2015)
Seemingly throughout project implementation the stakeholders have been kept informed
of the status and progress of the project With respect to notifying the hostel residents and
general public notices are placed in and around the hostel to inform them of meetings
and the ward councillorrsquos office take the lead on this (Mthethwa interview 2015)
There have been a number of communitypublic meetings that have taken place as the
project has progressed From the fieldwork I was not able to draw on precisely how many
meetings had taken place since or precisely when the meetings took place or what was
discussed in each of those meetings Generally the ward councillor said at least once a
month a consultative and progress report meeting would take place between the
various stakeholders where officials would engage the hostel residents and general
public
According to Majikijela interview (2015) the ward councillor and the economic rep the
main area of involvement on the part of the hostel residents has been in providing
labour A small percentage of the residents have been involved in the construction-work
and some of the clerical work on the project Their involvement in discussions on the
project is said to often be arbitrarily halted by political interference (Sololo interview
2015) For instance Bako interview (2015) the architect recalled that on the design of the
family units Liefa Architects did not talk to the end user ie the residents to ask them
what they wanted Instead a design which was informed by other examples of similar
projects was presented to the residents of Sethokga and the general public (Bako
interview 2015) ldquoThe design of the hostel was not lsquoexclusiversquo to Sethokga and its contextrdquo
(Bako interview 2015)
Page | 72
In relation to the size of the hostel and its residents only a very small percentage of the
hostel residents have been employed in the project the December 2013 January 2014
labour records reported the following
Table 1
Total workforce 66
Females 7
Males 59
Youth 28
Adults 38
Semi-skilled 20
Skilled 22
Disabled 0
General workers 24
Source LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor report
I was fortunate to have attended one of the community meetings that were held at an
old community hall within the vicinity of the hostel This meeting took place on a
Saturday the 15th of August 2015 and it was quite the experience There was a relatively
strong police presence at the meeting The police kept watch and managed the
activities inside and outside the community hall As there were concerns that the
proceedings might get out of hand and a possible tussle between those in attendance
might arise The meeting was chaired by the ward councillor and aside from the residents
of Sethokga in attendance was one official from the GPDHS an official from the EMM
community leaders and ANC committee members
There was an obvious and overwhelming male presence in the meeting tempers ran
high and there was an observable resistance from the residents of Sethokga to the
presence of the three females in the meeting This included me and two female
committee members Several times the meeting was disrupted by shouts and echoes of
discontentment questioning what women were doing at a meeting for men lsquordquothey have
no place here they do not even live hererdquo were the words of some of the men Our
presence seemed to really infuriate some of the men This was similar to what Ramphele
(1993) Segal (1991) Thurman (1997) and Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) observed in
their work and suggested that even now and within the context of Sethokga that the
men in the hostel are still quite at odds with having women as a part of their lsquogathering of
Page | 73
menrsquo and possibly even living among them The demeanour of some of the men in this
meeting suggested that they found the presence and role of women in these meetings
unneeded It was evident that these men had become far too accustomed to living
lsquoalonersquo as men Ramphele (1993) noted that the idea of an unambiguous constant and
unrestricted presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a serious point
of contention for some of men Some men expressed unwillingness while others a
struggle to comprehend or endorse this change that seemed overly unfamiliar and
challenging to come to grips with (Ramphele 1993) From my observation in this meeting
the same seems to hold true for Sethokga
The purpose of the meeting was to consult the hostel residents who were identified to be
the first recipients beneficiaries of the allocating of family units to consult them on issues
of final rental proposals allocation processes and status of the project The invitation for
this meeting was apparently only extended to those particular individuals but
subsequently the meeting was taken over by those who had objections to the process of
allocation rentals and why the meeting sought to exclude them and divide the residents
Generally the meeting was unruly and the ward councillor as well as the community
leaders and committee members struggled to manage the crowd and the rampant
tempers in the room
The agenda for the meeting is provided below to provide the reader with some context
and outline of the intension of the meeting Unfortunately tempers ran especially high in
this meeting and in my opinion none of the items on the agenda were successfully
addressed
Page | 74
Figure 8 August 15 community meeting agenda
Source Sethokga Community meeting 2015
521 Broad vision and aim of the project
The vision and aim of the project was described by the key informants who to some
extent unanimously used the following key words integration sustainability community
participation to improve peoplersquos lives restoring honour addressing the ills of hostel life
and bringing families into a safe and secure environment The housing officer for me
captured well the overall sentiments of the key informants when he said ldquowe are
surrounded and have so many companies in Tembisa so clearly you will find letrsquos say a
white guy working in the area but then they travel to Kempton Park or some other area
outside Tembisa and that is where they live So it would be nice to see him living in
Sethokga The project is about integration and not just integrating the residents of
Page | 75
Sethokga to the rest of the township but other ways of integration like racial integration
That is what I want to seerdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015)
Additionally the broad vision and aim of the hostel conversion project is to instil a culture
of payment into not just the hostel but the broader community ldquoPeople cannot just keep
wanting everything for free government cannot afford itrdquo The interviewees that
expressed this position were Majikijela Sololo Mthethwa Dyiki Bako and Shibambo
Seemingly under the CRU programme the project would seek to influence and instil this
culture of payment through the rental housing stock focus of the programme That
largely seeks to promote government owned and managed rental housing stock a
departure from the lsquofreersquo housing approach (Bako interview 2015)
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga development
Source Liefa Architects 2015
Phase 1B Phase 2B Phase 3B
Phase 1A Phase 2A
Phase 3A
Page | 76
What was surprising to me was that the family units are not intended to be occupied by
current residents only The idea is that some of the current residents would live elsewhere
and when this question was posed to the official from the GPDHS Majikijelarsquos interview
(2015) response was that the hostel residents who did not qualify in terms of the required
criteria for the renting of the units would be allocated RDPs in the neighbouring area of
Esselen Park but he could not provide clarity as to how and when this would happen
The vision of Sethokga that can be seen from the plan provided below is a reconfigured
locality Rehabilitated single-sex compounds into self contained family units furnished
with child care facilities park(s) garden(s) a community centre recreation facilities and
parking areas
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn
set out to address those needs and challenges
Although the CRU Programme only sets particular administrative operational and
project facilitation guidelines Arguably these guidelines do in some respect address
a number of the ills associated with hostels such as the issue of overcrowding lack of
privacy and poor living conditions (Pienaar 2010) Within Sethokga there are
challenges of tribalism high prevalence of HIV drug abuse alcohol abuse
criminality overcrowding lack of privacy possible health hazards a lack of ablution
facilities The hostel being unsafe for women (especially those who are staying in the
hostel illegally) was identified and shared by the key informants as some of the major
challenges confronting the hostel This view was shared by the ward councillor the
housing officer from the EMM the project manager from the GPDHS the consulting
engineer and the wardrsquos economic representative
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi the issue of tribalism occurred
as a result of what he recalls as a defining political shift ldquoafter the release of Mandela
and when they started preaching lsquothis thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions
happened according to who was Zulu or Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Here the ward councillor explains what he saw as
some of the factors that led to what is currently the strong predominance of Pedi and
Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel suggesting that
ldquoThey were mixed here when they started talking about negotiations that
there must be elections and then the IFP (Inkatha Freedom Party) was
rejecting that and that had nothing to do with membership it was a situation
of the warlords the Zulursquos terrorizing the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa
Page | 77
and standing with the white man The Zulursquos did not like that so that is where
the Zulu and Xhosa divide started and that is when you found that in
Sethokga it became predominantly more Xhosa there was fighting and war
the Zulursquos were chasing people out of their territory at the other hostels The
Xhosarsquos ran to Sethokga There was fighting everywhere even here in
Sethokga and all over the Pedis Vendas Tsongarsquos they all ran away from
those hostels where they were being chased out and they came hererdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
It was unclear as to the extent to which the project dealt with any of these
challenges and how or if they were factored into the project The project seems to
have a general lsquobest practicersquo approach to hostel conversion irrespective of the
circumstance of a particular hostel
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project
ldquoThe political volatility of the project poses an enormous threat to the successful
allocationletting of the family unitsrdquo (Majikijela interview 2015) On the part of the
key informants their continued inability to answer the perhaps not so simple question
of what would happen to those who could not afford the monthly rental of the family
units This suggested that the issue of rentals has remained a grey area even as the
project heads towards project completion ldquoWe will worry about that when we get
thererdquo was the brisk response to my inquiry on this matter Similar to what was
observed by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in the City Deep Redevelopment
project Sethokga faces a similar challenge
Certainly public community participation in any context is a complex and at times a
contentious exercise (Mdunyelwa 2015) I remain hesitant whether the Sethokga
hostel conversion project has been able to lsquotrulyrsquo engage residents and the broader
community in a transparent and reciprocal manner Seemingly affordability will be
the determining factor of who will be able to rent a unit To those who cannot afford
it stands to be seen what remedy will be extended to them
Moreover the following factors were cited as some of the limitations of the project
the lack of transparency political interference an inadequate dissemination of
information to residentscommunity and the projects failure to respond to what the
solution(s) will be for lsquonon-qualifyingrsquo residents who cannot afford the monthly rentals
Page | 78
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful
I wanted to find out from the key informants particularly those who have been
directly involved in the conversion project what for them would constitute a
successful project and how from their point of view the residents and the greater
community would know that the project is completed and has been
successfulunsuccessful Overall the leading response was that a project would be
successful when the family units are occupied Some of the interviewees added that
the process of allocating the units and resolving the myriad of issues are most
certainly likely to cause further delays and will require intricate resolution (ie peoplersquos
unwillingness and otherrsquos inability to pay tension and opposition to paying rentals
opening the letting to tenants who are not hostel residents and so forth)
In summary the thoughts shared by the housing office at the EMM and the wardrsquos
economic representative capture in essence the general position held by every one
of the key informants
ldquoFor me a complete project will be the units functioning on their own and then
people will be told during a public meeting We also need to involve the mayor the
MECs and the media People will be told that it is finished and this is what is going to
happenrdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015) ldquoAfter it has been completed I want to see 80
percent of the people who have been staying in the hostel still residing in the hostel
It must not just be open to whomever There are people as far as Johannesburg who
want to stay here because they see it being comfortable and nice forgetting we are
looking to improve the lives of the current hostel dwellers There are even those in the
township who think that people of the hostel cannot pay so this is not for themrdquo
(Sololo interview 2015)
Page | 79
53 Visual narrative of the family units
531 Architectural designsplans
The design of the family units is what the architect referred to as a multi-storey approach
ldquoThe three storey walk-ups address the need for housing much better than an RDP wouldrdquo
(Bako interview 2015) They have an urban apartment-like feel about them but the
mundane (uniform) paintwork gives them a distinct government provided social housing feel
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development plan
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 80
Figure 12 Architects Section E - E
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 11 Architects Section F ndash F
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 13 South Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 81
Figure 14 North Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 15 East Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 16 West Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 82
532 The project site of family units
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site
View of the site of the family units from one of
the hostel blocks situated adjacent to the
construction site across the street
Construction of the family units
commenced in August of 2011
Site notice placed at the entrance of the
family units construction site
The Sethokga community hall situated at
the entrance to the family units
construction site and adjacent to the
council offices
Page | 83
For the most partthe construction of the
family units is nearing completetion
Walking through the site personally I felt that
the family units had a somewhat prominent
RDP lsquolookrsquo about them
Ground floor view
The entrance into the construction site of the
family units and the site office which is
situtated within the vicinity of the site
Page | 84
533 Inside the Family units
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units
Doorway into one of the three bedroom
family units which leads into an open plan
dining and kitchen area
Each unit has its own dining sitting and
kitchen area
The construction site is lsquopolicedrsquo by the Red
Ants (a private security company)around the
clock and also a private security company
Some of the security members seen on site
they insisted I take a picture of them to
include in this study
Page | 85
Built-in sink and geyser
The family
units offer a number of distinct qualities that
the hostel clearly does not have which
include privacy and a dignified living
environmentspace
Each unit has its bathroom with a built-in
toilet bath and shower
Shower
Separate and additional toilet as part of the
three bedroom family units
The diningsitting area and two adjacent
bedrooms
Page | 86
The site of the family units is being guarded by a private security company and members
of the Red Ants (a private security company) When asked about this the official (the
project manager overseeing the Sethokga hostel conversion project) from the GPDHS
said that this was necessary to ensure that no unauthorised occupations take place This
was also to guard against any possible vandalism or the looting of materialsequipment
or the site office (Majikijela interview 2015)
54 Summary of main themes and findings
This study had a number of themes which resonate with the case study The localised
context of Sethokga hostel offered great insights into the current state of hostels as
spaces and places that still largely exist within a context of volatility poor living conditions
and complex socio-economic challenges (Thurman 1997) The historic exploits on hostels
revealed and I suppose confirmed that the hostel system was established supported and
perpetuated by methodical policy and controls to discourage the permanent settlement
of Africans in urban areas or any intention of relocating their family to urban areas (Segal
1991) Furthermore within the contemporary South African context this has posed a
number of challenges and has been a longstanding reality of a number of hostel dwellers
as observed in the work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010)
The view from one of the family units (a ground
floor three bedroom unit) is onto the ward
councillorrsquos offices and the hostel in the
distance
One of the three bedrooms in the family
units
Page | 87
Sethokga hostel is also one of many hostels that exist within a historically-laden context
The strong prominence of Pedi and Xhosa native speaking men in some respect also
speaks to the events of circular migration that are still a lived-reality of the men of
Sethokga This according to the ward councillor has meant that the men have had to
maintain ties with their families in the Eastern Cape and Limpopo while most of them live
in Sethokga away from their families (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) In terms of gender
issues the aspect of men and housing the hostel conversion project does not adopt a
particular stand on this Seemingly the project makes no effort to appreciate the
apparent rural location of the wives partners children and families of a vast majority of
the men in Sethokga The idea is that anyone who is able to afford the monthly rental of
the family units can sign a lease agreement and rent a unit However this presents a
number of issues and leaves a lot unaccounted for and unanswered ie will the families
of the men in the hostels make a transition to join them in the family units Is this even a
possibility for them what impact would this have on the already stretched social
amenities in the area Arguably in the case of Sethokga this oversight has been a serious
area of contention and has amplified the political volatility of the project
The heavy-handedness of the hostel system cunningly imposed a sense of no escape
yet quite interestingly the later unwillingness to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have their
hostel converted into family units (Thurman 1997)
Among the key findings of the research report is that the lsquorental onlyrsquo tenure option and
approach to the hostel conversion project was the biggest challenge and one of the
most critical points of contention (Pienaar 2010) On the one hand the hostel residents
are arguing that they cannot afford the proposed rentals while on the other hand
officials are of the opinion that this is in fact untrue and not wholly representative of the
attitude(s) of all the hostel residents Thus a supposed unwillingness to pay and a culture
of entitlement was cited by the key informants as the underlying state of affairs and one
that posed the biggest threat to the project and in particular how the family units would
be allocated
Although the project is for the most part about converting Sethokga hostel into family
units in principal it is also about redress integration improving the living conditions of
Sethokga residents reconfiguring the mental and physical landscape of hostels in
contemporary South Africa and introducing children and women into the hostel
Integration was repeatedly cited by the key informants as the main imperative of the
study Political interference and the very particular sensitivities around political allegiance
Page | 88
(keeping in the mind the local elections are fast approaching) are factors that were
cited would cause the greatest difficulty in the allocation of the family units
54 Conclusion
Undoubtedly the Sethokga hostel conversion project has a number of components and
features to it that are complex in part ambiguous and would require further and more
detailed study Seemingly the CRU programme is a lsquodeparturersquo from the Hostel
Redevelopment Programme In part it offers prospects to facilitate the provision of
affordable rental tenure for those earning below R3500 while seeking to promote the
integration of publicsocial housing into the broader housing market Under the
administration of the CRU programme one of the leading aims is to facilitate the creation
of sustainable public housing assets (Pienaar 2010) However the CRU programme has
been criticised as a framework that is largely operating in a policy environment that is
hostile elaborate and not speaking to the needs of the people on the ground
Furthermore many see it as solely a hostel upgrading policy viewed often to be done
impromptu in response to local pressures (Pienaar 2010) To paraphrase Pienaar (2010)
the vagueness regarding the roles and responsibilities of the respective provincial
department of human settlement and municipalities has not provided much confidence
in hostel conversion projects
Chapter five has examined the Sethokga hostel conversion project and attempted to
unpack how the project has been conceptualised This chapter has identified and
outlined the main components of the project its main stakeholders and what has been
their role in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Discussed were the project phases a
number of critical elements such as how the project has understood the needs and
challenges of the hostel residents In addition to this chapter five outlined the way(s) in
which the residents have been involved in the project if the project considered anything
important in terms of gender issues and if what have these been factored into the
project By and large chapter five drew extensively on the findings of the fieldwork and
made an effort to narrate some of the insights and perspectives shared by the key
informants To conclude the chapter a collage of diagrams and images were presented
to offer the reader a visual narrative of the site of the family units
Page | 89
Concluding chapter
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoWhat does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
61 Review and reflections
This research report consisted of six chapters chapter one introduced the study
chapter two provided the theoretical backdrop of the study chapter three
introduced the study area (Sethokga hostel) chapter four discussed the evolution of
hostel redevelopment conversion and what has been the states approach to hostel
conversion and chapter five examined the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project
In chapter one the main point of discussion was the research question outlining the
aim and objectives of the study and the research methodology
Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project been conceptualised
in how the project has been conceptualised does it address the stigma of hostel life
and it what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What informed the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail what is the broad aim and vision
of the project what is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
Page | 90
In chapter one it was also argued that this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects had somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore that there needed to be more inquiry and
study conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel
conversion projects
The studyrsquos theoretical backdrop was discussed in chapter two The aim of this was to
contextualise the term hostels as to clearly illustrate what is meant by it In addition
to drawing on particular strands of literature concepts ideas and arguments that
resonated with the study Chapter two argued that the historically the landscape of
hostels has by and large been complex at times perplexing and highly contentious
Chapter three introduced Sethokga hostel It elaborated on the locality of the hostel
and its local as well as municipal context A visual narrative of the hostel was also
provided and this captured the current state of the hostel and the conditions in which
its residents endure It was established that ironically the conditions in the hostel are
not much different to many of the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg
The hostel was badly designed poorly built and is suffering years of neglect it is in
appalling and overcrowded condition
Chapter four described the evolution of hostel redevelopment conversion in the
country and what has been the states approach to hostel conversion post-1994 This
chapter discussed in some detail the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme Arguing that these programmes have to
date been the lsquoforerunnersrsquo of the statersquos approach to addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo
While in chapter five the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
was examined Chapter five was the crux of this research report The discussions in the
chapters before it set up the groundwork for a critical exploration of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project and for unpacking the research question
Chapter six concludes this study and seeks to answer the question ldquoso what does this
mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo Since this
report was conducted as part of the requirements for the partial fulfilment of an
Urban and Regional Planning honours qualification It is important to address the ldquoso
what for plannersrsquo question and the value that this report stands to offer to the
Page | 91
planning profession Firstly let us reflect on what have been some of the limitations of
the study
62 Limitations of the study
For the most part this study had a wealth of information and sources to draw from
The insights and wisdom provided by the key informants were invaluable their
willingness and enthusiasm to participate in this study was not something I had
anticipated but I remain truly grateful
Due to certain constraints more especially time constraints and the particular scope
focus of the research report this posed some limitations to the study In only
interviewing and engaging with officials and not with the residents of Sethokga the
voices opinions and views of the officials told only one side of a many-sided story
How the project affects and has affected the residents Is this something they want
support and for those who do not what are some of their reasons for contention Is
circular migration still as prominent a feature within the current context of Sethokga
What is the present-day nature of household configurations in the hostels (is the duty
of the older men still to order the actions of the younger men ie the cleaning and up
keeping of the communal area and other household duties) what for the residents
of Sethokga would constitute a successful project
Even as this study concludes the side of the hostel residents remains largely untold
and unreported Furthermore the supposed apathy on the part of the hostel residents
and the views expressed by the key informants that family units offer the most ideal
and best alternative to the residents of Sethokga could not be explored and
interrogated further given the limitations of the scope of the study
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners
Within contemporary South Africa there have certainly been a vast number of
conflicting views held regarding what should be the role and future of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Although academics policy makers bureaucrats developers and
the general public have usually been unable to reach longstanding middle-ground
on what should be done about hostels One of the more widely held views is that
hostels certainly present a real challenge but also an opportunity For government
Page | 92
developers non-government organisations (NGOs) built environment practitioners
and needless to say the residents of hostels themselves (Thurman 1997)
Planners are frequently cast in the role of performing a balancing act (Campbell
2006) As a result the adaptability of the planning profession as a coherent and
impartial discipline has over the years become rather topical subjects (Campbell
2006) This has inevitably continued to require new and innovative ways of lsquoseeingrsquo
lsquocomprehendingrsquo and lsquodoingrsquo things in order to shape and re-shape an inherently
divergent and historic-laden urban landscape (Jupp and Inch 2012) In the midst of
the shifts in the traditional conception and role of the planning profession as a merely
procedural and administrative activity (Harrison and Kahn 2002) planning is still to a
great extent closely tied to government structures (Cornwall 2002) Therefore within
this particular context of government driven intervention urban planning
professionals stand to be instrumental facilitators of development and offer essential
expertise and tools towards addressing some of the challenges within our urban
landscape (Albert and Kramsch 1999)
This study observed a range of intertwined urban dynamics ie around housing socio-
economic distress a wavering political climate and the need to be more
environmentally conscientious This necessitates focused attention and much
consideration as the political economic social and environmental junctures in which
planning has come to operate has meant that the profession has become
susceptible to external pressures scrutiny and influence (Campbell and Marshall
2002)
64 Conclusion
South Africa has for a number of years into democracy been at a critical time of
limited housing supply and a desperate need for housing (Khan and Thurman 2001)
(Pienaar
2010) Planners have an important role to play in facilitating coordinating and
effecting the reconfiguration of the urban landscape towards improving the setting
of inherently socio-economically ailing spaces such as hostels (Jupp and Inch 2012)
Hostels have largely remained as spaces that have continued to perpetuate
underdevelopment inequality and disempowerment (Khan and Thurman 2001) If
family units are to wholly address the stigma of hostel life and the convoluted nature
Page | 93
of hostels to alter the landscape of hostels and define a novel future for hostels and
their residents It is certain that this will require decisive action collaborative efforts
and the wisdom of retrospection
Page | 94
List of references
African National Congress 1994 The Reconstruction and Development Programme A
policy framework ANC Johannesburg
African National Congress (2003) Briefing note 5 Housing
httpwwwancorgzaelections2004briefingshousingpdf
Albert A and Kramsch O (1999) Space Inequality and Difference lsquoRadical Turns
and lsquoCultural Termsrdquo European Planning Studies 7(1) 77 ndash 79
Bandyopadhyay S and Green E (2008) Nation-building and Conflict in Modern
Africa The Suntory Centre
Barnett C (1999) Broadcasting the Rainbow Nation Media Democracy and Nation-
building in South Africa Editorial Board of Antipode 31 (3) 274-303
Benit-Gbaffou C and Mathoho M (2010) A case study of participation in the City
Deep Hostel Redevelopment Project Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Bonner P and Nieftagodien N (2012) Ekurhuleni the making of an urban region
Wits University Press
Campbell H and Marshall R (2002) Values and professional identities in planning
practice in Allmendinger R And Tewdwr-Jones M (eds) Planning futures new
directions for planning theory London Routledge
Castles S and M J (Millerl (2008) The Age of Migration International Population
Movements in the Modern World New York The Guilford Press
Charlton S et al (2014) From Housing to Human Settlement Evolving Perspectives
South African Cities Network
Chipkin I and Meny-Gibert S (2011) Why the Past matters Histories of the Public
Service in South Africa PARI Short Essays number 1 Johannesburg PARI
Collinson M A and K Adazu (2006) The INDEPTH Network A demographic resource
on migration and urbanisation in Africa and Asia Views on Migration in Sub-Saharan
Africa Proceedings of an African Migration Alliance Workshop C Cross D
Gelderblom N Roux and J Mafukidze Cape Town HSRC Press 159- 172
Page | 95
Collinson M A (2006) Health Impacts of Social Transition A study of Female
Temporary Migration and its impact on Child Mortality in Rural South Africa A
dissertation submitted to the School of Public Health University of the Witwatersrand
in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master in Science in the branch of
Medicine
Cornwall A (2002) Making Spaces Changing Places Situating Participation in
Development Institute of Development Studies IDS Working Paper 170
Creswell J W (2009) Research Design Qualitative Quantitative and Mixed Methods
Approaches 3rd Edition Los Angeles Sage Publications Inc
Demacon 2014 Sethokga hostels mixed typology market analysis market research
Findings and recommendations
Department of Human Settlements Republic of South Africa Programmes and
Subsidies document assessed on 7 July 2015 from
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentspublicationshuman_settlement
s_programmes_and_subsidiespdf
Department of Social Development Republic of South Africa White Paper on
Families in South Africa 2012
Dyiki M (2006) City of Cape Town Integrating Families Hostels to Homes
Redevelopment Programme Presentation
httpswwwwesterncapegovzatext200652006_hostels_presentation-_dyikipdf
Fritz V and Menocal A R (2007) Understanding State-Building from a Political
Economy Perspective An Analytical and Conceptual Paper on Processes
Embedded Tensions and Lessons for International Engagement Report for DFIDrsquos
Effective and Fragile States Teams Overseas Development Institute
Greenberg S and Mathoho M (2010) ldquoConceptual Framework on Public
Participation and Developmentrdquo Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Page | 96
Grieger L et al (2013) Moving Out and Moving In Evidence of Short-Term Household
Change in South Africa from the National Income Dynamics Study
Goldblatt B amp Meintjes S (1996) Gender and the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission a submission to the TRC May
Harrison P And Kahn M (2002) The ambiguities of change the case of the planning
profession in the province of KwaZulu-Natal South Africa in Thornley A and Rydin Y
(eds) Planning in the global era Aldershot Ashgate
Jupp E and Inch A (2012) Planning as a profession in uncertain times Town Planning
Review Vol 83 No 5
Khan F and Thurman S (2001) Setting the Stage Current Housing Policy and
Debate in South Africa Isandla Institute
Liefa Consulting (2015) Maps diagrams source
LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor
report
Mapetla M M (2005) Aspects of urban housing for women and men in Southern
Africa Roma Lesotho National University of Lesotho
Marshall M N (1996) Sampling for qualitative research Family Practice Oxford
University Press
Mosoetsa S (2011) Eating from one pot the dynamics of survival in poor South
African households Johannesburg Wits University Press
Mdunyelwa M L (2015) Public Participation in Hostel Redevelopment Programs in
Nyanga and Langa Dissertation presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in
the Faculty of Arts and Social Science at Stellenbosch University
National Housing Report (2009) -
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentsnational_housing_20092_Techn
ical_General_Guidelines
Netshitenzhe J (2011) A Developmental State South Africarsquos developmental
Capacity UCT Summer School Mapungubwe Institute for Strategic Reflection
Page | 97
Peoples Housing Programme httpwwwjoburg-
archivecozacity_visionannualreport2002-03chapter10pdf
Pienaar J S and Cloete C E (2005) Hostel Conversion as Social Housing in South
Africa Funding Regime VS Real Needs Case Study of the Sethokga Hostel Conversion
Project Pacific Rim Real Estate Society (PRRES)
Pienaar J (2010) Community Residential Units key elements application implications
for Metros Municipal Leadership Housing Forum0
Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the Community Residential Units
Programme 2006
httpwwwgovzaabout-governmentgovernment-programmescommunity-
residential-unit-cru-programme
Ramphele M (1993) A Bed Called Home Life in the Migrant Labour Hostels of Cape
Town Ohio Ohio University Press
Segal L (1991) The Human Face of Violence Hostel dwellers speak In The Journal of
Southern African Studies Vol 18 No 1
SJN Development Planning Consultants (2000) Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial
Development Framework
South African Department of Housing 2008 Community Residential Programme
httpwwwhousinggovzaContentCRUHomehtm
South African Local Government Association
httpwwwsalgaorgzaappwebrootassetsfilesGuidelines20for20Municipalities
Flyer20rental20housing20NMApdf
South African Yearbook 20122013
httpwwwsouthafricanewyorknetconsulateYearbook2020131320Human20S
ettlemp
Statistics South Africa Census (2001) Concepts and Definitions Report
httpswwwStatistics+South+Africa+Census+(2001)+Concepts+and+Definitions+Repo
rt+03-02-26+Version
Thurman S (1997) Umzamo improving hostel dwellersrsquo accommodation in South
Africa Environment and Urbanisation Vol 9 No 2
Page | 98
Urban Sector Network Final Report August 2000 ndash April 2003 Hostel Redevelopment
httppdfusaidgovpdf_docsPdaby792pdf
Van der Berg S (2010) Current poverty and income distribution in the context of
South African history Stellenbosch Economic Working Papers 2210
Von Holdt K (2010) Nationalism Bureaucracy and Developmental State The South
African Case South African Review of Sociology Volume 41 Number 1
Watt A (2012) Essentials of project management
httpopentextbccaprojectmanagement
Ziehl S C (2001) Documenting Changing Family Patterns in South Africa Are Census
Data of any Value African Sociological Review 5(2)
Interviews with key informants
Shibambo Vincent Resident Engineer LTE Consulting Interview 14thAugust 2015
(Sethokga family units project site)
Mthethwa Jabu Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Housing Officer Interview 17
August 2015 (Ekurhuleni Kempton Park Housing Offices)
Mohlapamaswi Ward Councillor ANC Tembisa Ward 4 Interview 18 August 2015
(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers
Sololo Lufefe Ward 4 Economic Development Representative Interview 18 August
2015(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers)
Majikijela Sisa Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlements Sethokga
Hostel Conversion Project Manager Interview 19 August 2015 (Sethokga family units
project site boardroom)
Dyiki Malibongwe Housing Development Agency Official 7 September 2015
(Housing Development Agency head office Killarney Johannesburg)
Bako Simba Liefa Architects Interview 9 September (LTE House Sunninghill
Johannesburg)
Page | 11
Pages
Maps
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni
hostel and Vusimuzi hostel40
Map 2 Locality map44
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex45
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework48
Figures
Figure 1 Ground floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 2 First floor plan of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 3 Elevation of typical dormitory compound43
Figure 4 Collage of exterior imagery of the hostel50
Figure 5 Collage of interior imagery of the hostel52
Figure 6 Municipal amenities54
Figure 7 The adjoining area55
Figure 8 Community meeting agenda74
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga developmenthelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip76
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development planhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip79
Figure 11 Architects Section F-Fhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figue 12 Architects Section E-Ehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip80
Figure 13 South Elevation80
Figure 14 North Elevatonhelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip81
Figure 15 East Elevation81
Figure 16 West Elevation81
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site82
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units84
Table
Table 1 Total workforce in the period December 2013 - January 2014 Sethokga
sitehelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphelliphellip72
Page | 12
ANC African National Congress
Cllr Councillor
CRU Community Residential Units
DoHS Department of Human Settlements
EMM Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
GPDHS Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement
HRP Hostel Redevelopment Programme
IDP Integrated Development Plan
IFP Inkatha Freedom Party
MSDF Metropolitan Spatial Development Framework
PWV Pretoria ndash Witwatersrand ndash Vereeniging
RDP Reconstruction and Development Programme
SDF Spatial Development Framework
USAID United States Agency for International Development
USN Urban Sector Network
Page | 13
Chapter one will essentially introduce the research report The aim of this chapter is as
follows highlight the objective of the study provide a background to the study and
also discuss the rationale and problem statement In addition to detailing the
research question the significance of this study and the research methodology will
also be reviewed
Coincidently this research report is written and takes place at a time where there has
been somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms With the prevailing question being ldquoWhat iscontinues to be the
role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo Although this study will not in effect
actively seek to answer that particular question it presents a valuable premise for this
study ldquoFamily units to address the stigma of hostel liferdquo
The main aim of this chapter is to contextualise hostel to position the study within an
expanded theoretical framework The main chapter will in part argue that hostels
have largely remained as urban enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric and
that the rigid structures of regulation and control which were imposed on hostel
dwellers have perpetuated a complex state of affairs The literature review section
which details some of the key concepts theories ideas and arguments on the topic
will elaborate further on this
This chapter aims to provide a comprehensive description of the study area and so it
is in this chapter that the local as well as municipal context of the study area will
altogether be considered The aim of this chapter is to provide the reader with a sort
of lsquofeelrsquo of Sethokga hostel and its present-day circumstance It will attempt to
articulate to the reader the authors own experience and account of the study area
Page | 14
in an effort to provide the reader with a well-versed narrative of the multifaceted
nature of the hostel and the complex reality in which its residents endure
The South African statersquos approach to hostel redevelopment conversion is
discussed It is argued that the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of hostel
redevelopment conversion Chapter four discusses a number of state policy and
approaches addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo Ahead of this however the evolution of the
hostel redevelopment conversion approach is examined which dates back to the
earliest (soon after 1994) efforts by the South African government to remedy the ills of
the hostel system
Chapter five examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seeks to unpack
the conceptualisation of the project This chapter reflects and draws extensively on
the findings of the field work and the invaluable insights offered by the key informants
The main components of the hostel conversion project are examined and the vision
of Sethokga personified by the hostel conversion project is presented in chapter five
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoSo what does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
Page | 15
Introductory chapter
In the wake of the political transition in South Africa in 1994 and for some time
preceding this time frame violence squalor overcrowding and socio-political strife
had long become characteristic of some of the features associated with hostels and
the stigma of hostel life (Thurman 1997) Due to its history as systematically
disempowered yet politically vocal enclaves we have come to know or perhaps be
familiar with hostels as highly contentious and antagonistic environments with a
burdened local identity (Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The stigma of hostel life constitutes among a host of conditions an innate reality
where the residents of hostels inhibit isolated destitute and unbecoming spaces
(Segal 1991) Built as single-sex labour compounds to accommodate African migrant
labourers for the duration of their stay in South Africarsquos white urban areas hostels
occupy a unique position within the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape
(Thurman 1997) As sojourners in South Africarsquos white urban areas the law
constructed a lsquolegalrsquo person called a labourer who was lsquoauthorisedrsquo to temporarily
reside in the urban space but had to retreat to their rural quarters once their lsquoservicersquo
had been concluded (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Thus to draw attention to the
unkindness of their living conditions many hostel dwellers have continued for the
better part of South Africarsquos democracy to lsquochoosersquo physical violence as a tool
perceived to best serve and afford some attention to their troubles (Pienaar and
Crofton 2005)
Within the context of this research report the term hostels widely refer to single-sex
dormitory style labour compounds which emerged in South Africa under the
apartheid system and ideology of separate development (Pienaar and Crofton
2005) The ideology of separate development and the resultant influx control policies
were a distinctive trait of the government of a particular juncture in the countryrsquos
history - a government that as part of its mandate held to discourage the permanent
settlement of the African populace in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) This further
translated itself in the governmentrsquos refusal to plan and consent to any sort of
lsquomeaningfulrsquo investment into areas designated for the other who were primarily
located in the townships on the periphery of the urban terrain (Ramphele 1993)
Page | 16
Badly designed poorly built and suffering many years of neglect hostels were
primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for the comfort of hostel
dwellers (Thurman 1997) Conceivably the hostel system socialised its inhabitants into
an undignified and callous condition which has in some respect persisted and has
unfortunately not wholly been reconciled (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In hostels that
were male occupied hostel dwellers were regarded as lsquomen of four worldsrsquo which
referred to their present and existing life within the hostel the surrounding township(s)
places of work and their rural homes (Segal 1991) The hostel system made it
impossible for hostel dwellers to live in the hostel with their families ie wives
husbands partners children (Segal 1991) This consequence is particularly important
to note at this early stage in the report because of the wisdom and context it adds as
the study progresses
Coincidently this research is written and takes place at a time where there has been
somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms Undoubtedly the prevailing question has been ldquoWhat is should be
the role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo The current Minister of Human
Settlements has said that ldquohostels no longer have a place within South Africarsquos
democratically reconfigured state and so the state needs to get rid of hostelsrdquo (Sisulu
2015) However in a nation such as South Africa efforts towards transition are
ambiguous complex and can often be marked by violence (Mosoetsa 2011)
According to Thurman (1997) of an estimated 604 000 hostel beds around the country
in the late 1990s accommodated whole families relatively close to urban centres
Furthermore Thurman argues that hostels present both a significant challenge and an
opportunity for government NGOs developers and hostel dwellers themselves High
density housing stock stood to gain a considerably large supply of low income
(Thurman 1997) Even while a large number of hostel redevelopmentconversion
projects continue to be riddled with tension and difficulty the prospect(s) for change
and reform that they offer cannot simply be dismissed
This study seeks to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel conversion project to
develop an informed understanding of the defining features and characteristics of
this particular hostel conversion project It examines what is and what has been the
nature of engagement and dialogue between the various stakeholders involved and
discusses the insights they were able to offer to this study In 2015 21 years into South
Page | 17
Africarsquos democracy we have to wonder what is needed to make amends and offset
the dishonour of hostel life
11 Background to the study
We have to understand what the hostel system did was to lsquoaccommodatersquo the
African populace in single-sex labour compounds (Segal 1991) Upon their arrival
their presence in urban areas was constrained as they were met with strict rules and
restrictions (Ramphele 1993) In turn social relations were severally volatile and
ambiguous under the hostel system as hostel dwellers were constrained in their ability
to interact in certain or in their own chosen ways (Thurman 1997) There have been a
number of authors who have noted that the notion of family was partly if not entirely
redefined under this system (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were designed with little or no
thought given of human comfort security and interaction and many are still in
appalling neglected and overcrowded conditions (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) For
many people hostels represent a bitter and hopeless reminder of the past while for
others they are a well prized and affordable shelter in an environment of serve
homelessness (Thurman 1997)
Accordingly soon after 1994 South Africarsquos democratic government made some
attempt to convert hostels into environments suitable for family life although the
extent of this has not entirely been clear (DoHS 2015) This was met with hostility
violence and unwillingness by some hostel dwellers particularly those in the Pretoria
Witwatersrand and Vereeniging (PWV) region to have their hostels
convertedredeveloped into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010) The
violence that had become synonymous with hostel life became an overwhelming
impediment that proved difficult to overcome (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that the idea of an unambiguous constant and unrestricted
presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a point of contention for
some of the men who had far too long become accustomed to living lsquoalonersquo as
men Some expressed unwillingness while others found it a struggle to comprehend or
endorse this change that seemed far too unfamiliar and a challenge to come to
grips with (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Thus in hostels where hostel conversion projects have since taken-off the general
attitudes perceptions and reception of the projects have in some respects continued
to be negative and unwelcomed Scepticism tension and hostility add to the already
complex nature of the hostel conversion projects (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
Page | 18
2010) Hostels are still largely spaces confronted with deep social injustices (ie poor
living conditions a lack of privacy overcrowded) and are an insult to the dignity of
their occupants in several ways as both spatially limited and socio-economically
limiting spaces (Ramphele 1993) The limits imposed by hostels onto hostel dwellers
have persisted in protracting unkindness and a distorted conception of the
fundamental purpose of housing Hostels remain as an unfortunate symbol of a
former governmentrsquos refusal and failure to acknowledge the personhood (the
position and quality of being an individual or having feelings perspectives integrity
and human characteristics needs and wants) of the men and women they housed
(Ramphele 1993)
12 Rationale
Arguably hostel conversion projects and particularly the conceptualisation of these
projects is still a relatively under-researched field Based on my efforts to find
published work on the subject and even though there have been a number of
hostels across the country which have undergone or are undergoing hostel
conversion this remains a rather neglected study field
Hostels within their historic make-up were for the most part premised on fairly uniform
ideals arrangements and gender configurations The demographic setting within
some hostels across the country have since become a lot more fluid and departed
from their former mandatory construct (as strictly single-sex spaces) In what were
predominantly male occupied hostels women and children have since moved into
some of those hostels
Sethokga hostel which will serve as the case study for this research is a hostel that is
still predominantly male occupied but is undergoing hostel conversion to convert the
hostel into family units I believe that the fact that the hostel is still predominantly
male occupied presents an intriguing dimension to this study on hostel conversion
and efforts to grapple with the research question
13 Problem statement
In the case of Sethokga hostel a hostel conversion project is underway but it is not
clear what has sparked such a conversion and to what extent it is driven by the
available policies or assessments of needs or what attempt has been made to meet
these needs Subsequently what would the conversion of a predominantly male
Page | 19
dominated hostel rife with historically inherent conditions necessitate Therefore
how has the conversion project grasped the experience of men within such a hostel
and how has it grasped the concept of family life
14 Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units been conceptualised and
based upon the conceptualised ideas does it address the stigma of hostel life and it
what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What led to the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail What is the broad aim and vision
of the project What is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
15 The significance of the study - positioning the study relative to existing academic
literature
The significance of this research report lies in what I believe is a gap in the scope of
work covered over the years on hostels particularly on hostel conversion projects
Based on my efforts to find published work on the subject questions around what
these projects entail their implications relevance and impact remain unanswered
In the work I have managed to access so far this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects has somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore there needs to be more inquiry and study
conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel conversion
projects
As documented by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) there are vast and intricate
layers of engagement communication participation and even discontentment
Page | 20
involved in hostel conversion projects For instance the legitimacy around where
decision-making lies and which avenues are or should be available to voice
concerns have been some of the challenges relating to hostel conversion and have
added to the already complex nature of these projects
There is most certainly room for a study to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel
conversion project and probe this idea that family units could serve as an adequate
tool for the apt reform of hostels as many of us have come to know them associate
with them or even disassociate from them
16 Aim and objectives of the research
The main aim of this research report is to examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project and how the project has been conceptualised
Objectives
To examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
To develop a more comprehensive understanding of the hostel conversion
approach relative to the socio-economic and political context of the hostel
To explore the possibility and potential of family units as a viable tool to
addressing the stigma of hostel life
To examine how the project has understood the needs and challenges of the
residents and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
To examine the specific spatial focus of the project
17 Research methodology
171 Type of research
The methodology used in the study is a qualitative approach to research and semi-
structured interviews were conducted as the primary means of data collection
Additionally the data collection process involved the use of a variety of sources
which ranged from books journal articles newspaper articles and online media
platforms in the form of articles and radio podcasts
Page | 21
According to Cresswell (2009) this particular method to research (a qualitative
method) entails among other things the use of horizontal dialogue conversation and
the exchange of ideas between the interviewer and the interviewees (Cresswell
2009) Key informants were identified on the basis of their knowledge of andor
involvement in the Sethokga hostel conversion project and the following individuals
were interviewed
1st interviewee Mr Vincent Shibambo resident engineer with LTE consulting (the
company facilitating the construction and administration of the project) Interview
conducted 14th August 2015 at the project site The interview took place in the
boardroom of the project site offices
2nd interviewee Mr Jabu Mthethwa housing officer from the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality Interview conducted 17th August 2015 the interview took place in Mr
Mthethwarsquos office at the council offices in the Kempton Park CBD area
3rd interviewee ANC Ward 4 Tembisa Ward Councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi Interview
conducted 18th August 2015 in the ward councillorrsquos office at the ward councillors
chambers situated adjacent to the project site offices within the vicinity of the hostel
4th interviewee Mr Lufefe Sololo Ward 4 Tembisa Economic Development Rep (Mr
Sololo sits on the ward committee that advises the ward councillor) Interview
conducted 18th of August 2015 at Sethokga hostel
5th interviewee Mr Sisa Majikijela official from the Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlements Mr Majikijela is the current project manager of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project Interview conducted 19th of August 2015 in the boardroom
of the project site offices
6th interviewee Mr Malibongwe Dyiki who was a resident of a hostel in Cape Town in
the early 1980s He then became a community representative in later years and then
moved on to be a government official facilitating hostel redevelopments in the
Western Cape He has written and published on hostels and has also participated in
policy discussions on the Hostel Redevelopment Programme Interview was done on
the 7th of September 2015 at the Housing Development Agencyrsquos head office in
Killarney Johannesburg where he is currently working as the Programme Manager for
the mining towns programme
7th interviewee Simba Bako architect with Liefa Architects (appointed by LTE
consulting Liefa Architects were responsible for the design of the family units)
Page | 22
Interview conducted on the 9th of September 2015 at LTE House in Sunninghill
Johannesburg
172 What kind of information is needed
The kind of information that was needed was information which contextualised the
study area within its broader local and municipal context Pre-existing data
particularly demographic and statistical data on the hostel and its surroundings
Ekurhulenirsquos Integrated Development Plan the Metrorsquos Spatial Development
Framework and information that would give an overview of the geographic social
economic and possibly even the political context of the study area is needed
Moreover project reports studies memorandums or minutes and state policy on
hostel conversion would also be useful
173 Collecting data
In collecting data there were a number of methods and tools that were used which
involved moments of ad hoc discussion and deliberation around the topic What was
invigorating and always thrilling was peoplersquos interest and curiosity regarding this
study The impromptu encounter(s) with people who were open and ready to share
their point of views and experience(s) honestly made the data collection process
that much easier
There was a considerable amount of time spent on examining literature books
articles (both academic and media sources) sources on the internet and journals
Collecting data also involved examining similar programmes and projects on hostel
conversionredevelopment so collecting desktop data and consulting library sources
was an invaluable part of collecting data
174 Sampling
The study sample is important for any research The choice between qualitative
quantitative or even the consideration of using a mixed methods approach should
be determined by the research question and not decided subjectively In grappling
with the research question it seemed most appropriate for the purpose of this study to
make use of a qualitative approach It was believed that a qualitative approach
Page | 23
would provide the necessary framework to respond to the research question and
address the aim and objectives of the study In answering the lsquohowrsquo and lsquowhyrsquo
questions that the study would pose a qualitative approach would engage in a sort
of comprehensive exploration of the many-sided and possibly complex dynamics of
the Sethokga hostel conversion project For this reason a qualitative interview-
centred approach was used (Marshall 1996)
Marshall (1996) argues that there are three broad methods commonly used in
selecting a study sample that is convenience judgement and theoretical sampling
techniques Convenience sampling involves the most accessible person(s) it is the
least time consuming requires the least effort and financing Judgement sampling
also referred to as purposeful sampling is according to Marshall (1996) the most
widely used sampling technique With judgement sampling the researcher
purposefully and actively selects a sample that would best respond to their research
question and in principle convenience is set aside While theoretical sampling
involves a process of selection of a sample that is mainly driven by and rooted in a
theoretical position the sample is selected to examine or elaborate a particular
theory (Marshall 1996)
For the purpose of this study the judgemental sampling technique was used and this
entailed the active and purposeful selection of what Marshall refers to as lsquosubjectsrsquo
with particular expertise ie key informants The sample selection was based on my
prior experience and practical knowledge of the study area The limitation however
was that there were quite a number of elaborate and contentious issues at play
which within the limits of this study could not be explored at length on account of
time constraints and the particular focus of this study
175 Ethical considerations
As a young female scholar entering into a rather conflicted lsquotoughrsquo and culturally-
laden environment I was faced with what was an apparent concern for safety and
so on my trips to the hostel I was always accompanied by my father or a friend
Initially my intention was to interview some of the hostel residents but the sensitivities
around the harshness of their living conditions were highlighted as a possible area of
vulnerability and the spate of xenophobia attacks particularly in and around hostels
suggested reconsideration As a researcher I ensured that the participants were all
Page | 24
well aware and informed that their participation was voluntary and they were at
liberty to withdraw their involvement at any stage The interviewees were informed of
the choice to remain anonymous if they wished and that the information they shared
would be used to develop this research report Thus my ethical obligation as a
researcher was to ensure that I did minimal harm and unintentional damage through
my research that I conducted myself responsibly and professionally at all times and
that I reported accurately what I found including unforeseen and even negative
findings
18 Conclusion
Hostels consolidated the migrant labour system They served not only to control the
number of black labour residing in urban areas but also to manage its behaviour As
hostels were designed to be unattractive and uncomfortable many comparisons
have been made between hostels and institutions such as army barracks and prisons
There is a window of opportunity in promoting hostel conversion but injecting
resources into previously marginalised communities have resulted and is resulting in
conflict local power struggles and competition for those resources (Thurman 1997)
The next chapter will discuss the theoretical backdrop of this study and elaborate on
key concepts theories ideas and arguments that have been of particular relevance
to unpacking the research question
Page | 25
Theoretical backdrop
2 Introduction
It is imperative at this point to contextualise the term hostels so as to clearly il lustrate
what is meant by it This section of the report will contextualise the term hostels and it
will examine key concepts theories ideas and arguments that are of particular
relevance to the study
Furthermore chapter two argues that hostels have largely remained as urban
enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
It argues that the rigid structures of regulation and control that were imposed upon
the former inhabitants of hostels were essentially just one part of a multi-faceted and
disconcerting circumstance that has continued to live on within a large number of
hostels (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012) This view that hostels operated and in some
respect continue to operate under a complex set of circumstances is shared and
supported by the work of authors such as Segal (1991) Ramphele (1993) Goldblatt
and Meintjes(1996) Thurman (1997) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) Dyiki (2006) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) Subsequently some of their work will be used to
unpack the research question and draw on certain aspects that resonate with the
case study The following abridged abstract describes some of the complexities
around hostels and the views captured in the work of some of the authors mentioned
above
According to Segal (1991) hostel life and the regulations imposed upon hostel
dwellers made it extremely difficult to maintain family life that is men would leave
their families in the rural areas for long periods of time to find work in the city
Ramphele (1993) notes that the families of the men would then became reliant for
their survival upon the remittance of the men Mapetla (2005) makes a compelling
argument that suggests that within contemporary society men are traditionally
culturally and even spiritually still regarded as the head the protector and provider of
their families even as the lines delineating the roles of men and women within
contemporary society have become faint and more fluid Arguably hostels still exist
within a highly complex setting (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Page | 26
21 Contextualising hostels
Generally hostels were badly designed poorly built and many have been suffering
years of neglect (Thurman 1997) Hostels were primarily built to accommodate
African migrant workers for the containment of their labour over the duration of their
stay in what were demarcated as South Africarsquos white urban areas (Thurman 1997)
There are notably three types of hostels namely public sector private sector and
grey sector hostels (Ramphele 1993)
Public sector hostels are hostels that were built and managed by provincial or local
authorities and mainly accommodated workers across a range of sectors (Ramphele
1993) Private sector hostels were built by private sector enterprise to house private
sector labourers who would mainly be working in the factories and mines (Pienaar
and Crofton 2005) Grey sector hostels were built on public sector-owned land by the
private sector under some form of contractual agreement with a government
authority (provincial or local) but were largely managed and controlled by private
sector employers (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Public and grey sector hostels were
generally situated in the townships (Thurman 1997) However when they were
planned these hostels were generally located on the outskirts of the cities but with
increased urban growth they now relatively tend to be more centrally situated
(Thurman 1997)
Ramphele (1993) argued that each hostel had a distinct form and quality about it
Elements of tribalism certain customs systems of belief and association dimensions of
conflict and conflict resolution were not homogeneous across all hostels (Ramphele
1993) The type of work that the migrant labourers did across the sectors they worked
was often rudimentary It ranged from unskilled to very basic semi-skilled work and it
was quite labour intensive in return for meagre earnings (Ramphele 1993)
Historically hostels were characterised by two main geographic classifications firstly
hostels in the backdrop of an urban context (ie also referring to inner city hostels)
and secondly hostels in the areas around mines (Segal 1991) According to Segal
(1991) urban context hostels had a more diffused grouping of hostel dwellers than
their mining counterparts (Segal 1991) Hostels in urban context developed broader
and somewhat complex relations with the outside community This contrasted with
the extreme isolation of hostel dwellers in hostels around the mines Therefore hostels
in the urban context were to a lesser extent conceived to be lsquomore openrsquo and lsquoless
strictly controlledrsquo However both were essentially sites of control and exploitation
Page | 27
with clearly marked physical boundaries in form of high walls and fences with single
and restricted entry and exit points (Segal 1991)
Hostels in urban areas had government bureaucracies responsible for their
management and maintenance as opposed to a single employercompany (Segal
1991) Moreover hostels in the urban context accommodated a wider and more
diverse range of workers who did not necessarily work for the same
employercompany or have uniform working hours or shifts In urban hostels ethnicity
was not the official organiser of hostel dwellers as men from different backgrounds
and homelands would and could share rooms (Ramphele 1993) Lastly and perhaps
the most important distinguishing feature of the two was the fact that hostels in urban
areas were not under the extensive force of lsquototal controlrsquo as was the experience of
mining hostel dwellers (Segal 1991 Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
According to Pienaar and Crofton (2005) public sector hostels accommodated the
largest number of hostel dwellers Overall the quality of living environment of hostels
was generally poor but this was particularly bad in public sector hostels (Ramphele
1993) Additionally the administrative processes and management of public sector
hostels was under dire strain as no clear records of those that lived in the hostels or
those entering and exiting the hostel were kept (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that although private sector hostels were considered to be
better managed and maintained The general state of all hostels whether public or
privately owned was largely characterised by poor living conditions a lack of
privacy the sharing of very limited spaces a distressed local context and
overcrowded conditions (Ramphele 1993) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) further note
that around the early 1980s hostel residents simply started to withdraw from payment
of rentals and thus the maintenance of the hostels grew even thinner and steadily
non-existent Public sector hostels grew especially financially and politically
unmanageable (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
22 Key concepts theories ideas and arguments
To unpack the research question and contextualise the study within a broader
theoretical framework this section of the report will discuss and draw on a number of
concepts theories ideas and arguments
Page | 28
221 The historic model of hostels the conceptualisation of the hostel system
In grappling with the historic model of the hostel system this section of the report will
discuss two main themes The conceptualisation of the hostel system and migration
migrant labour as conceived under the hostel system It illustrates the effect hostels
have had on shaping the lives and experiences of their inhabitants in unique and
complex ways (Thurman 1997)
South Africa is a country marked by a legacy of systematic discrimination and the
deliberate disempowerment of a lsquocategoryrsquo of its population (Thurman 1997) Hostels
were established supported and perpetuated by methodical policy frameworks and
brute controls to discourage the permanent settlement of the in historically lsquowhite
areasrsquo (Segal 1991) Thurman (1997) argues that hostels occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are symbolic of three centuries of
systematic racial discrimination
Seemingly ignited by and originating in the mining industry in the nineteenth century
the construction of hostels reached a peak during the 1960s and 1970s in the period
that has been referred to as the ldquogrand apartheidrdquo years (Thurman 1997) They were
built as single-sex dormitory compounds to accommodate African migrant labourers
as sojourners in what were delineated as white urban areas (Ramphele 1993) In
hostels which were intended strictly for male migrant labourersrsquo job-seeking by
African women was criminalised and a deliberate policy not to provide family
housing was pursued (Ramphele 1993)
Common to hostels was the blurring and hostility of the boundaries between the
hostel dwellers place(s) of work and their living spaces (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) In
turn some authors have argued that hostels in some sense functioned as a lsquototal
institutionrsquo According to Segal (1991) and Ramphele (1993) geographically many
hostels were isolated and situated literally at the edges of urban areas and society in
general They were primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for
human comfort safety or enrichment (Thurman 1997) The heavy-handedness of the
hostel system imposed a cunning inferiority complex a sense of no escape yet quite
interestingly a later unwillingness and indifference to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have
their hostel converted into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Ramphele (1993) and Segal (1991) make a rather compelling argument and share
the view that the behaviour and conduct of some of the hostel dwellers against
Page | 29
having their hostel converted into family units is indicative of similar behaviour and
actions displayed by long-term prisoners and people contained in barracks They
argue that a substantial number of long-term inmates would in some instances
display great unwillingness and some difficulty to the prospect of re-entering society
after being socialised into a total institution a reformatory (Ramphele 1993 and
Segal 1991) According to a text by Statistics South Africa (2001) an institution can be
defined as a communal place of residence for persons with common characteristics
(Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001) One could then argue
that one of the common characteristics shared by many hostels was the migrant
labourer status attributed to them (Dyiki 2006)
222 Migration and the notion of migrant labour labourers as conceived under the hostel
system
Castles and Miller (2008) argues that all through time and space individuals and
families have been migrating and doing so for a number of reasons Universally the
migration lsquophenomenonrsquo was and has been as a result of varying factors and in
response to certain causes and events such as demographic growth environmental
changes development vs underdevelopment and the seeking of lsquobetterrsquo
opportunities (Castles and Miller 2008) Others have turned to migration to seek jobs
often located or perceived to be concentrated in larger urban centres (Collinson
and Adazu 2006 Castles and Miller 2008)
Migration can occur as a voluntary or forced process This study is particularly
interested in the event of migration that becomes forced migration when the
circumstances of individuals and families leave them little or no choice but to pursue
lsquohopersquo away from their native home-base (Castles and Miller 2008) Arguably this was
characteristic of the hostel model Hostels enabled mines and later other industries to
suppose and cause that hostel dwellers had homes in rural areas (Collinson 2006)
Seemingly the rural populace was the lsquodesiredrsquo workforce ushered into the city and
mines and exploited as labourers for the development of the urban-based economy
(Thurman 1997)
According to Thurman (1997) the residents of hostels were typically considered as
rural traditionalists and lsquodangerousrsquo outsiders by the residents of townships which
surrounded the hostel Their physical as well as social isolation meant that they often
retained strong links with their rural home-base (Segal 1991) This involved the
Page | 30
periodic movement of individual household members between the hostel and their
rural homes (Thurman 1997) The ruralurban linkages which were subsequently
fashioned became a distinguishing feature of not just hostel dwellers but the black
African populace and as a part of their experience of urban life (Collinson and
Adazu 2006) The costly urban world was thus considered by many as merely a place
of work (Segal 1991 and Ramphele 1993)
This type of migration - also often referred to as lsquocircularrsquo or lsquooscillatingrsquo migration -
became characteristic of a sort of temporary sentiment to life and living in the city
(Dyiki 2006) Additionally the events of circular migration presented certain
household dynamics and challenges in maintaining the often faint links between the
migrant and the households family left behind (Collionson 2006 Ramphele 1993)
Conceivably hostel dwellers have for a long time had a common rural orientation
(Segal 1991) ldquoIt has been repeatedly demonstrated that migrants do not leave
behind the countryside in their journey to the cityrdquo and this rural consciousness has
remained central to the migrant labour population (Segal 1991 9)
Within contemporary society the concept of lsquothe new economies of labour
migrationrsquo has emerged as an alternative position and argues that migration can be
and has become a household strategy (Collinson and Adazu 2006) According to
Collinson and Adazu (2006) within their analysis of contemporary migration patterns
migration has now largely become something that is purposefully chosen by
members of a household family This phenomenon involves the temporary migration
of some individuals within the household family in pursuit of opportunities towards
the collective betterment of the family household or even their broader community
(Collinson and Adazu 2006) Under this model of migration family and community
networks are considered to play an important and supporting role in facilitating
migration between urban-based and village-based households families (Collinson
and Adazu 2006) What is then required of the migrant is thatheshe reciprocate the
initial support offered by hisher household family community as received in hisher
rural-base (Collinson and Adazu 2006)
While in some respect migration is becoming a lsquolonged-forrsquo process and somewhat of
a deliberate choice on the other hand adverse circumstances force families
households to partake in this process as a means of survival (Collinson and Adazu
2006) The ability of migrants to maintain both an urban and rural residence in
whatever context ie historic or contemporary continues to present a social
geographic and economically complex state of affairs (Pienaar and Crofton (2005)
Page | 31
223 The notion of bedhold
The context of hostels designed to be uncomfortable and uninviting the closest
likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo was in the form of a bed Every aspect of life and
survival in hostels revolved around a bed (Ramphele 1993) According to Ramphele
(1993) this in turn perpetuated a circumstance of lsquoclientelismrsquo and blurred the lines of
patronage when it came to the exchanging of the membership of beds and when
beds were to be allocated or reallocated (Ramphele 1993) The ill-defined and fluid
relationship of patronage between bed-holders would in some respect function like
and resemble households (Ramphele 1993 Segal 1991 Mosoetsa 2011)
In some sense bed-holders assumed an intermediary role and served an informal
function as lsquolandlordsrsquo thus as proprietors of the bedhold (Ramphele 1993) Hostel
dwellers became lsquobed-holdersrsquo rather than lsquohouse-holdersrsquo in the urban space
(Segal 1991) It became unduly problematic that the bed was the only space over
which they could have any measure of control It after all distorted the perceptions
hostel dwellers developed of themselves in relation to their environment constraining
them to varying degrees (Ramphele 1993) Ramphele (1993) argues that the limits set
by physical space in hostels also defined in very clear terms the inside versus the
outside security versus insecurity family versus non-family and urban versus rural She
further argues that onersquos very identify in the hostel and their lsquolegal existencersquo in the
urban space depended on their attachment to a bed (Ramphele 1993) According
to Ramphele (1993) the bed acted as a sort of mediator thus lsquoa go-betweenrsquo the
hostel dwellers and the rest of society to which they remain somewhat disconnected
and possibly indifferent (Ramphele 1993)
224 The stigma of hostel life
The stigma of hostel life gave a rather conspicuous meaning to lsquoblack urban lifersquo and
their experience(s) of life in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were badly
designed poorly built and many suffer years of neglect (Thurman 1997) There have
been a number of authors who have argued that hostel dwellers suffered a great
injustice to their humanity their perception of self constrained relations with others
and a constant struggle to maintain family networks with their often rural-base
(Goldblatt and Mentjies 1996)
Page | 32
The living conditions in hostels have been expressed in basic terms as shocking
disgusting inhumane cruel and intolerable by both scholars and residents of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Hostel accommodation is undesirable both aesthetically and
conceptually and there are a number of common features which characterise most
hostels a lack of privacy overcrowded and poor living conditions very limited space
and a serious state of disrepair (Ramphele 1993) Failing to delineate private
personal space the purpose of hostels was to ensure a compliant labour force (Segal
1991)
According to Ramphele (1993) hostels represent physical space that is not only
limited but is also limiting Ramphele makes a distinction between the circumstance
and living arrangements of hostel dwellers and township residents Arguing that
although physical overcrowding of sleeping accommodation between the two
(hostel dwellers and township residents) many not be much different in terms of the
ratio of people to roomsbeds (Ramphele 1993) For township residents it is most likely
that they would be sharing these limited facilities with kin or friends rather than
complete strangers (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of hostels some men
women may adapt too well to living in single-sex hostels and would find change too
difficult to cope with (Ramphele 1993)
225 Family versus household configurations
The terms family and household are not necessarily synonymous According to the
Department of Social Development (2012) ldquoa household comprises of either (i) a
single person who makes provision(s) for hisher food or other essentials for living or (ii)
a group of at least two or more people living together who make common provision
for their food and other essentialsrdquo (White Paper on Families in South Africa 2012 11)
Moreover the Department notes that a household can contain a family yet the
members of the household are not always necessarily a family further remarking that
ldquoa household performs the functions of providing a place of dwelling and the sharing
of resources and these functions can be performed among people who are related
by blood or people without any such relationshiprdquo (White Paper on Families in South
Africa 2012 11) This distinction of family and household configurations is useful to this
study for two main reasons (a) as it has been suggested that one of the broad aims of
the hostel conversion approach is to introduce facilitate lsquofamily lifersquo and to inject a
family quality into these historically single-sex environments (b) Is it then supposed by
the Sethokga hostel conversion project that the household configurations in the
hostel are at present existing wholly in the absence of family configurations
Page | 33
It is important to be mindful of the fact that with time households have become
more complex and family structures more diffused (Mosoetsa 2011) Hostel dwellers
through years of living under space constraints and in single-sex accommodation
have developed certain ideologies practices and habits (Thurman 1997) Arguably
the hostel system redefined and reshaped family and household configurations and
constructed a complex social setting (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of male
occupied hostels relationships among men are characterised by hierarchy and
Ramphele (1993) notes that this is legitimised by lsquotraditionrsquo and is based on age
differences The older men are more likely to occupy positions of authority and be
regarded as the lsquoheadsrsquo of the household and in authority to organise the affairs of
the household Whereas the younger men would be cast in the role of attending to
duties considered lsquotypicalrsquo to women and that is the upkeep of the household ie
cleaning cooking In this lsquomanrsquos worldrsquo tradition and age regulate the day-to-day
function of the household (Ramphele 1993) The links between the men and the
families they had have left behind has arguably become increasingly scant and
incoherent (Grieger et al 2013) With the blurring of their lsquobindingrsquo reciprocal
obligations and support the conception of family life was redefined and put under
considerable strain as a result of migrant labour laws and the criminalisation of job-
seeking activity in urban areas of their rural wives partners (Segal 1991)
In both family and household configurations shared obligations and mutual support
takes many forms (Mapetla 2005) The family structure is perceived to be the
lsquocommander and regulator of the activities and conduct of the individual members
The family structure has been set apart from a household in that a household is more
of a residential unit where related andor none-related individuals in a sense lsquoeat
from the same potrsquo (Mosoetsa 2011) In some cases the individuals and members of
a household provide themselves jointly with food andor other essentials however a
household can also consist of a person who lives alone The distinguishing feature is
that a family configuration consists of people individuals who have a blood-kin
connection and this can include immediate and extended relatives but the same
does not necessarily always hold true for household configurations (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005 Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001)
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing
South Africa can still somewhat be regarded as a traditionally patrilineal society
where land and property are traced through the male lineage where upon marriage
Page | 34
a woman is required to leave her native home to reside with her husband at his home
(Mapetla 2005) This system has been more inclined to empower men (Ziehl 2001)
Subsequently within contemporary society and within the lsquonew politics of gender
relationsrsquo property and land ownership have since become a highly contentious
subject Therefore the issue of housing is quite a significant one and warrants some
reflection particularly the aspect of men and housing (Mapetla 2005)
Gender roles have steadily been changing and are increasingly becoming ill-defined
(Ziehl 2001) So how can or rather how should housing projects and interventions
such as hostel conversion projects be more gender sensitive inclusive representative
and reflective of the changing gender roles both in a social and spatial sense
Gender considerations regarding housing and housing projects need to be mindful of
the innate differentiation between men and women and their not always uniform
needs and interaction(s) with space (Mapetla 2005) The often male bias when it
comes to access to housing might just further be perpetuated through hostel
conversion projects The question here is then does this new conception of a
reconfigured living environment in the form of family units make provision(s) towards
addressing any of the housing-related gender biases What do these projects
consider important in terms of gender issues if at all how have these issues been
factored into the projects
Gender and housing related theory has often argued strongest the case of women in
their inability to access housing land the law and related funding (Ziehl 2001) The
issues of gender relations and access to housing have become increasingly topical
(Mosoetsa 2011) Womenrsquos rights access to the law resources and social amenities
have been areas which have gained a significant amount of traction in both policy
and academic circles owing to historically discriminatory laws (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005) However in South Africa and perhaps this is true for many other
societies traditionally culturally and even spiritually men are still to a significant extent
regarded as the head of household the foremost provider for their families (Mapetla
2005)
Within the context of hostels migrant labour laws which also made it a point that the
remuneration of its African labour workforce was as horrendous as the conditions they
lived in shaped a particular aspect of menrsquos relation to housing in the urban context
and their experiences (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In a study conducted by Segal
(1991) a group of men living in a hostel were interviewed to give their account of life
in the hostel According to Segal (1991) it became apparent that the men tolerated
the hostel because they felt humiliated by even the thought of losing their roles as the
Page | 35
provider for their family Some men suggested that they could and would not bring
their wives or children to the hostel for even a brief visit (Segal 1991) In their minds
they were better off alone in the citymine because the burden of their own survival
was already enormous (Segal 1991)
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy
Large sections of the South African state have continued to be institutionally
ineffective unsustainable and dysfunctional (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert 2011) Post-
1994 efforts towards nation-building and state formation in the country have taken
many forms a unitary state the inauguration of a new president of the Republic of
South Africa and the promulgation of the 1996 Constitution of the Republic(Barnet
1999) Furthermore the ideals of nation building and state formation would attempt
to diffuse into a sound and convergent form what was once opposite and adverse
(von Holdt 2010)
The housing deficit in the country was and has continued to be one of the greatest
challenges facing the government particularly the inadequate provision and access
to housing for the black majority who had been rendered destitute and occupying
dreadful accommodation (Thurman 1997) In what could better be regarded as
temporary disaster relief areas than housing suitable for any human to call lsquohomersquo
(Ramphele 1993) Post-apartheid bureaucratic inefficiency class formation
redundant budgetary rituals antagonistic attitudes towards public service vocation
and authority has greatly stifled service delivery imperatives ie social housing
provision (von Holdt 2010) Undoubtedly the role of policy towards addressing issues
such as housing and service delivery is a significant one (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert
2011) this will be discussed further in chapter four
228 The role and significance of community public participation in hostel conversion to
family unitrsquos projects
Public participation in any context is a complex and at times a contentious exercise
Academic literature on community public participation tends to presuppose an
experience or existence of informal unambiguous or authentic relations in
community participation processes (Mdunyelwa 2015) This particularly in housing
related projects and programmes with the assumption that if all the stakeholders
involved are consulted the process of participation is likely to yield positive results and
success (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) In South Africa the notion of public
Page | 36
community participation has gained popularity as a democratic practice essential
for development and nation-building (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their research project entitled ldquoA
Case Study of participation in the City Deep Hostel Redevelopmentrdquo suggests that
there are more complex and less diffused forces at play According to Benit-Gbaffou
and Mathoho (2010) the central question often becomes when and at what point
can one say people have effectively or meaningfully participated This question is
especially relevant and significance to hostel conversion projects and to efforts to re-
configure hostels as lsquofamily units suitable for family lifersquo (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010) According to state policy the hostel conversion redevelopment approach is
and has been a nation-wide intervention initiated by the post-1994 government to
redevelop convert hostels in efforts to de-stigmatise these historically-laden spaces
(Dyiki 2006) Moreover the current Minister of Human Settlement has of late stated
on a number of media platforms the hostel conversion approach also seeks to
rehabilitate these historically single-sex migrant labour compounds into family
apartmentsunits to promote a family-oriented setting (Sisulu 2015) According to a
2001 text by Statistics South Africa ldquoconverted or upgraded hostels should be treated
in the same way as a block of flats and each unit considered as a separate housing
unitrdquo (Statistics South Africa Census2001 3)
The importance and usefulness of public community participation in hostel
conversion projects have been a widely and overly debated topic However this
does not wholly take away from the fact that there are many and varied obstacles
and challenges when it comes to the actual practice and experience of
participation on the ground (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) Even while the political
and socio-economic contexts of every project are varied with different structures and
the coordination of stakeholders take on different forms (Mdunyelwa 2015) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) argue that participation has often become a political
process riddled in processes of negotiation and rampant differences of opinion
coupled with a mix of personal andor political ambitions (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010)
Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their study of the City Deep Hostel
Redevelopment Project outlined a number of issues which the project encountered
before during and after the hotel redevelopment project there included
Page | 37
Before the redevelopment process
Managing change while also trying to mitigate violence the unauthorised
occupation of tenants wanting to gain the benefits of the redevelopment project
and the allocation of units (as a contentious challenge) were cited as challenges
encountered before the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
During the process
Challenges around the design of the units (limitations and constraints with respect to
skills time and finances) the issue of labour the provision of public and social
facilities services (ie cregraveches play areas for the children) were cited as being
encountered during the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
Issues after the project
Tariff rates (with electricity as one of the biggest concerns) along with the
disagreement and discontentment around rental payments were cited as the
challenges which were encountered post the hostel redevelopment process A
central question and concern that arose focused on whether the hostel did not just
became a renovated workersrsquo hostel or if it actually did change into actual family
units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
With the study area for this research in mind I am left wondering if the issues identified
by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) are unique to the City Deep contextproject
or are they to some extent representative and reverberate to the broader
challenges and limitations of hostel conversion projects across the country Certainly
there is some value to participation when it comes to hostel conversion
redevelopment but the process of participation particularly within the context of
hostels as politically and socio-economically volatile environments will most likely be
confronted by sturdy issues of inherent sensitivities and nuances (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010) This is what Mdunyelwa (2015) decisively refers to as binary cultural
political and social structures alluding to the sentiment that some hostel dwellers are
in some respect men and women of two minds set free from the physical shackles of
oppression yet still sadly unable and ill-equipped to live and transform their thinking
well beyond that (Mdunyelwa 2015)
Page | 38
23 Conclusion
Typically the body of work that exists on hostels is unambiguously and largely
concentrated on the historically-laden context of hostels It especially articulates
issues of violent conflict and tension within hostels and their surrounding areas
Conflict situations are often captioned as hostel versus township lsquowarsrsquo There is an
important political backdrop to this which relates to the rural urban links made
mention of in this chapter
Furthermore the poor living conditions of hostels the inadequate provision of services
and social amenities should be considered The loss of family life and the sense that
hostels pose as limited spaces which is a negative reflection on to dignity of its
inhabitants are some of elements associated with the stigma of hostel life (Bonner
and Nieftagodien 2012 Ramphele 1993) This has to quite a significant extent
remained a present-day and associated reality of the hostel setting and has posed
vast challenges to hostel conversion redevelopment projects
This chapter has argued that the landscape of hostels has by and large remained
complex at times perplexing and highly contentious As a resultant the wicked
consequences of the hostel system have been many and varied but all of which
warrant due attention The theoretical backdrop on hostels has been useful in
developing themes that resonate with the case study Sethokga hostel Of particular
relevance to the case study will be role and significance of community public
participation in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Highlighting some of the
issues encountered before and during the project as the project has not yet been
completed Certain aspects of the discussion on key concepts theories arguments
and ideas and how they resonate with the case study will be explored further
Particularly the notion of bedhold the aspect of men and housing the stigma of
hostel life and the resultant consequences of the hostel system will be critically
discussed in chapter five which examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project
Page | 39
Introducing Sethokga hostel
3 Introduction
In addition to the study area this chapter will in greater detail describe and locate
Sethokga hostel It examines its local as well as municipal context and presents a
visual narrative of the hostel The aim of the visual narrative is to provide the reader
with a lsquosensersquo of the physical setting of the hostel thus to provide the reader with a
visual depiction of the multifaceted circumstance of the hostel and the complex
challenges in which its residents endure Chapter three largely seeks to provide the
reader with an impression of the context in which the Sethokga hostel conversion
project is taking place
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)
In the period between 1890 and the late 1920s Ekurhuleni (at the time referred to as
the East Rand region of the Transvaal Province) experienced increased numbers of
black male workersmigrants This was as a result of a surge in the gold mining sector
which took place on the Witwatersrand gold reefs (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
According to Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) of the 15 000 workers that were
employed in the sector some 5 000 worked in what is now called the Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality With time the number of workers in the Ekurhuleni area
continued to rise considerably most of who were oscillating migrants who were either
accommodated in labour compounds such as hostels or shanty settlements in
townships across Ekurhuleni such as Tembisa Duduza Tsakane Kwa-Thema and so
forth (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) also argue that for most of the period of the
booming mining sector in the Witwatersrand reef to well into the countryrsquos
democratic dispensation political contention in hostels had long been a common
feature throughout the region As a consequence hostels and a number of the
townships in Ekurhuleni have somewhat continued to exist within a circumstance of
deep-seated antagonistic political and socio-economic conditions (Bonner and
Nieftagodien 2012)
Sethokga hostel is one of the largest hostels in the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan region
according to the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis Study in 2014 there
Page | 40
were approximately 12 120 residents living in the hostel (Demacon 2014) Of that
roughly 4 000 have since the beginning of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
been relocated or reallocated within other blocks in the hostel to make way for the
construction of the family units (Demacon 2014) Some of the relocations of residents
have been to alternative sites outside the hostel to either Enhlanzeni hostel or
Vusimuzi hostel both situated in the Tembisa area (Demacon 2014)Interestingly
Enhlanzeni as well as Vusimizi hostels are also experiencing issues of overcrowding
poor living conditions and similar socio-economic conditions to Sethokga Moreover
neither Enhlanzeni nor Vusimuzi hostel have or are undergoing upgrading
conversion It was not clear in the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis
Study what the reasons for relocating the residents of Sethokga to these hostels were
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni hostel and
Vusimuzi hostel
Source Demacon 2014
Page | 41
311 Geographic description of the study
Sethokga hostel was built in 1980 and much like other hostels across the country the
Sethokga hostel was badly designed poorly built and has been suffering years of
neglect Sethokga hostel is a public sector type hostel and is owned by the
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Sethokga was built to accommodate male
migrant labourers from a range of industries (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Similar to
numerous other hostels men could live in the hostel so long as they had work in
industries but wives partners and families were prohibited from residence (Thurman
1997) They were entitled only to short-term visiting permits Regular and violent raids
which were carried out by authorities during the day and at night would rigorously
enforce these regulations to chase away arrest or bus back the wives partners and
families of the men back to the homelands (Thurman 1997)
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi initially the hostel
accommodated a lsquomixturersquo of residents black men across all tribes and ethnicities
but he recalls the change that occurred in the 1990s in response to political shifts He
recalls that ldquoafter the release of Mandela and when they started preaching lsquothis
thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions happened according to who was Zulu or
Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Below the ward
councillor explains what he saw as some of the factors that led to what is currently
the strong predominance of Pedi and Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel
suggesting that ldquoThere were mixed feeling when talks were rife concerning
negotiations that could lead to possible elections because the IFP (Inkatha Freedom
Party) was rejecting such a notion At the time it was a situation of the Zulursquos terrorizing
the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa and standing with the white man The
Zulursquos did not like such an idea which caused a divide among the Zulu and Xhosa
This led to conflict between the Xhosa and the Zulu There was fighting everywhere in
the country and you found some Pedis Venda and Tsongarsquos ran away from certain
hostels because they were being chased out and some landed up in Sethokga (
Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) The points made by Cllr Mohlapamaswi flag some
interesting points for instance that this hostel in some respect played the role of a
place of refuge and might affect how residents view it
Sethokga hostel is situated on approximately 22 hectares of land and consists of 29 U-
shaped single and two storey dormitories but mainly consists of the two storey walk-up
dormitories (Demacon 2014) The hostel lies on medium dolomitic soil despite this it
has been said and reported that over the years this has not had a significant impact
Page | 42
on much of the structural qualities of the hostel (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) The
structural sturdiness of the hostel is said to have been mitigated through precautions
such as drainage and the assembly of lsquowellrsquo positioned pavements (Demacon 2014)
According to the ward councillor there are a few women and children living in the
hostel although it is not quite clear how many They are however not recognised as
lsquolegitimatersquo residence of Sethokga (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Arguably a
number of the hostel redevelopment conversion projects that have taken place
across the country have been as a response to the prevailing presence of women
and children who had come to live in the hostel The fact that this hostel has
remained predominantly male occupied presents a number contextual dimensions
to the hostel conversion project This will be explored in chapter five which will
examine the conceptualisation of the hostel conversion project
According to Thurman (1997) it is not uncommon in hostels for up to three families to
live in one room measuring 20 square metres Such rooms were designed to
accommodate two to three workers or even up to twenty people to share a sink a
shower and toilet (Thurman 1997) Yet lsquowholersquo families ie husbands wives children
or extended families have not moved into Sethokga Overcrowding remains a
concern and privacy is scarce in the hostel (Demacon 2014) The dormitories have
very limited physical space and little room for manoeuvre The typical floor plan of a
hostel is provided on the next page and depicts the rigid rudimentary and restrained
design of the hostel compound Sethokga hostel has identical floor plans and
elevations
Page | 43
Floor plan of a typical dormitory compound
Source Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
Figure 1 Ground Floor Plan
Figure 2 First Floor Plan
Figure 3 Elevation
Page | 44
312 Locality
The hostel is situated in the East Rand region of the Gauteng province within the
municipal administrative jurisdiction of the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (EMM)
in the Kempton Park ndash Tembisa Customer Care Area It is located in the north-eastern
region region B of the EMM in the township of Tembisa and lies to the south of the
Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and to the east of the City of Johannesburg
Moreover the hostel is lies between the Kempton Park Pretoria railway link near
Oakmoor station thus a multipurpose and inter-as well as intra-regional public
transport node It is well serviced in terms of public transport and easily accessible
from the R21 (Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
Map 2 Locality map
Source Google maps 2015
Source EkurhuleniGIS 2015
Page | 45
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex
313 Local and municipal context
Tembisa is one of the largest townships in the metro and it is situated in region A of the
EMM towards the north-western end of the municipality The hostel lies in ward four of
the metro to the east of Midrand and to the west of one of the most affluent suburbs
in region A Glen Marais along with other high income areas such as Serengeti Golf
Estate Midstream and the suburb of Edenvale (Demacon 2014)
The Integrated Development Plan (IDP) for the Oakmoor area Area 19 of the metrorsquos
Local Integrated Development Plan (LIDP) was last prepared in 2000 The report
contained among its leading aims to establish an integrated framework to guide and
facilitate development interventions in the area (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000) It was documented in the report that the SDP would guide the
Page | 46
municipalityrsquos decisions in the development and management of the area in a way
that the report articulates as follows by encouraging and setting the framework for
private sector investment and initiatives and by seeking to strengthen economic
activity in the area through the identification of specific projects and programmes
which would kick-start development and lastly working towards improving service
delivery (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) The report reviews the
historically context of the area and argues that basically no provision was made for
service delivery or the adequate management of land and no consideration of land
use imperatives was given This was the case throughout the Tembisa Township (SJN
Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Furthermore the report established that the general land-use pattern across most of
the township was mainly comprised of residential developments It was in this 2000
Integrated Development Plan that it was overtly and in retrospect alluded to that
Tembisa had been established to function at that time as a dormitory settlement for
the neighbouring economic centres of the East Rand region such as Kempton Park
Olifantsfontein and Midrand (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
An abstract in 2000 SDF report(SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000 stated
the following that investigations had confirmed that the Sethokga hostel buildings
were structurally sound except for some weather proofing of external walls and basic
finishes to walls floors and ceiling Some repair work to cracks and precautions to pre-
empt future cracking may be necessary but the hostel blocks would offer little
difficulty in terms of conversion into single and family units According to the report
there seemed to be more problems with engineering services For example the
internal sewer reticulation was said to be so dilapidated that it may have needed to
be replaced entirely Parts of the water supply network would need to be replaced
fire hydrants installed electricity supply upgraded and grading of roads and storm-
water disposal required substantial attention (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
When the completed report was presented in 2000 it set out a case that the
municipality was currently negotiating with a non-profit organisation to acquire hostel
land and convert the hostel buildings into single and family units and manage such
housing stock (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) It further documented
that the lsquoultimatersquo number of dwelling units would be about 1200 with the first phase
of development to deliver 500 units The report suggested that the development
would be undertaken by an external organisation and that few planning guidelines
Page | 47
would need to be proposed to harmonize Sethokga hostel residential complex with
the rest of the Tembisa Township In the report it is assumed that the hostel conversion
would should result in a lsquosecurity complexrsquo type of housing development and
access to the complex would be gained mainly from local distributors such as the
extension of MbizaIzimbongi Street and Nyarhi Street (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000)
The report argued for change in the household profile of the hostel and this would
result in an increased demand for additional social facilities such as schools cregraveches
churches libraries play area(s) etc It was found in the report that space intensive (in
terms of size) social facilities eg cregraveches and a multipurpose centre should be
encouraged within the complex (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Additionally limited retail specifically corner shops should be established within the
complex Lastly the report suggested that it was important to align the services in the
area with the rest of the EMM and ensure adequate capacity at points where the
services connected into the hostel Roads in particular were highlighted as important
in this regard to ensure continuity and appropriate distribution of traffic movement
What is more the report states that traffic should be discouraged within the new
settlement (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
The SDF marked the entire Sethokga hostel complex as lsquohostel upgradingrsquo married to
public open space within the vicinity of the complex churches sports fields and
mixed use areas were proposed in the SDF (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
Page | 48
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework (SDF) 2000
The development proposals in the 2000 Oakmoor area19 SDF proposed that Sethokga hostel be
Redeveloped into family units The SDF also proposed mixed use nodal developments within and around
the Oakmoor area and proposed additional facilities such as cregraveches schools and recreational
facilities in certain areas
Source SJN Development Planning Consultants Planning Area 19 Oakmoor Development
Plan Development Proposals Final Report 2000
This SDF for the area is quite old and has not been updated
since this 2000 plan
Sethokga
hostel
Page | 49
There are 22 hostels across Ekurhuleni which are spread across six regions in the metro
(Demacon 2014) Region A has two hostels of which one is government owned
region B has three hostels of which government owns two regions C D and E hosts
one hostel respectively while region F has sixteen hostels (it is not clear how many are
owned by government) (Demacon 2014)
In terms of social facilities and amenities the study area is situated within a 3km radius
from two schools Rabasotho Combined School and Philena Middle School It is also
within a 2km radius from a healthcare facility - Esselen Park Satellite Clinic - and within
a 1km radius from a sporting facility - Esselen Park Sports School of Excellence
(Demacon 2014) The nearest police station is roughly 6km away and a lsquogenerousrsquo
number of shopping as well as entertainment centres are found within a 15 to 20km
radius of the hostel The nearest taxi route is less than 100m with the nearest train
stations including the Tembisa Limindlela and Kaalfontein stations all falling within a
10km radius (Demacon 2014)
In 2013 the Tembisa economy contributed 83 to the overall economy of the EMM
whilst Ekurhuleni contributed 253 to the overall economy of the Gauteng province
in 2013 (Demacon 2014) Sethokga hostel forms part of the Kempton Park Tembisa
precinct and according the Sethokga Hostels Mixed Typology Market Analysis Report
it falls within the development context of the Kempton Park Tembisa precinct It hosts
a range of housing typologies supported under various housing programmes
(Demacon 2014) which include but are not limited to Informal Settlement Upgrading
programmes and projects Integrated Residential Development Programmes(s) and
Gap Market Housing Units According to this report there also exists several
opportunities for the development of medium to higher density residential
developments (Demacon 2014) The EMMs 2010 Metropolitan Spatial Development
Framework suggests that among the several intentions of the metro the EMM will seek
to expand the affordable housing market and that it will seek to accommodate a
wider range of the metrorsquos populace by making a range of housing options available
for people across different income groupings (Demacon 2014)
This next section exhibits the lsquoambiencersquo of Sethokga hostel as it currently stands It
delves into some detail regarding the current setting of the hostel and takes the
reader through the authorrsquos experience being in the hostel and lsquotravellingrsquo through its
narrow corridors It shares my experience of going into this dauntingly male
dominated environment riddled with metaphorical tones of disempowerment
despondency and neglect All the images displayed here were taken by the author
Page | 50
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel
In terms of its infrastructure the hostel is said to still be somewhat structurally sound
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005) Aesthetically however it appears quite old and rundown
and leaves a lot to be desired The neglected state of refuse and rubble removal
adds to the wear and tear appearance of the hostel Each of the blocks that make-
up the hostel consists of separate dormitories and entry into each dormitory is gained
through a common access point - a door - that leads into a communal area with a
basic cooking and dining area There are no ceilings in any of the dormitories The
paint-work both inside and outside has long worn out In general the hostel appears
especially dull and unsightly
321 Built form architecture
Figure 4
The hostel is old and run-down
The adjoining hostel blocks are lined with a
number of lsquoinformalrsquo traders
This area that leads into one of the hostel
blocks is where a resident displays his goods
for selling
Page | 51
A number of the men have cars which they
park in their respective blocks
Walk-up that leads into one of the dorms
that is later photographed and shows the
condition of the interior of the hostel
The hostel is in an obvious state of neglect
and refuse removal is ignored
I spotted a number of chickens roaming about
in the hostel and a small vegetable garden
near one of the entrances into a dorm
There is one entry and exit point into most of
the blocks in the hostel
Page | 52
Figure 5
This is a communal cooking area It was said
that because the stove is so old and has a
number of issues the electricity powering the
stove is never turned off and so it runs
constantly through the day and night time
The area next to the cooking area is where
groceries and other goods are stored for
safe-keeping
This communal dining area also leads into
the rest of the dorm and the place where the
hostel dwellers sleep
None of the dorms have ceilings or any
added furnishings (ie lighting) The hostel
has never been re-painted or renovated
since it was built in the early 1980s
Page | 53
This corridor leads into the bedrooms where
the men sleep Sheets andor curtains lead to
what felt like very restricted distressing and
unpleasent living quarters
The compartments offer very limited room to
move around and offer little privacy There
are two beds per compartment with up to
three people sharing a bed The living
conditions are as what Ramphele (1993)
described as constraining to varying degrees
since it is a physically restricted environment
with blurred boundaries of personal private
space The physical proximity to others offers
practically no prospect for privacy or liberty
to accommodate visitors
Page | 54
Figure 6
322 Municipal amenities
Male urinal
Communal toilet
Communal shower
Most of the hostel blocks in the hostel have
electricity yet it seems to be offered for
free
The entrance (door) leading to the one
communal shower and toilet facility There is
one bathroom per dorm
Page | 55
Figure 7
323 The adjoining area
Most of the blocks in the hostels have
communal indoor as well as outdoor taps
with running water provided without
charge
lsquoInformalrsquo activity trade takes place in
and around the hostel
The council offices are situated adjacent to
one of the hostel blocks across the street
The municipality does not collect refuse in
the hostel so it is up to the hostel residents to
dispose of their refuse (it was not clear why
the municipality did not collect refuse in the
hostel)
Page | 56
According to the (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) entry and access to the hostel are
determined by ones ability to negotiate for a bed Much like what was described by
Ramphele (1993) the closest likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo in hostels was in the form
of a bed this persists at Sethokga To some extent every aspect of life and survival in
Sethokga revolves around a bed
One gains entry into Sethokga through a block chairperson (Sololo interview 2015)
Some of the functions and responsibilities of these block chairpersonrsquos is to know what
is happening in that particular hostel block The illustration given by the economic
representative for the ward Mr Sololo was that
ldquoWhatever which has been happening in a particular block the chairperson
should be aware of it and should call a meeting Letrsquos say if you are sitting in a
block here and you have got a jukebox and you find that you are selling
liquor and now they tell you that by 10 orsquoclock you close down and the music
should be off Then you do not comply with that the block chairperson will
report you to the hostel committee and they will sit and come up with a fine
for you if you do not listen even after they fine you they will chase you out of
the hostelrdquo
According to Sololo interview (2015) the block chairpersons maintain peace and
order and need to ensure that any conflict is mediated They are elected by the
residents of a given block and are entrusted with their grievances Ideally they should
be first point of contact before anything is to be escalated to the ward councillor ie
if a pipe bursts and they are without water This would need to be reported to the
EMM by either the block chairperson and if the problem remains unresolved it is then
escalated to the ward councillor (Sololo interview 2015)
33 Conclusion
Chapter three has explored a number of elements which model the status quo of the
study field Ironically the conditions in the hostel are not much different to many of
the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg Sethokga hostel also resembles
many other hostels across the country The hostel is overcrowded there is little room
to manoeuvre and there is an obvious lack of privacy The hostel is a possible health
hazard to those who live in it
Page | 57
This chapter shared some of my own experience of the hostel My experience consisted out
of being in the hostel taking photographs in and around the hostel and engaging with the
living environment Inside the hostel I was engulfed by its narrow poorly lit and what felt like
stifling corridors Corridors divided by curtains and sheets led into what were very confined
sleeping compartments Beds offer a place of rest for those who have voluntarily or
involuntarily sought refuge in the hostel Many after all consider the hostels as a lsquobetterrsquo
alternative to homelessness The experience for me was unlike any I have ever felt since the
circumstance of my life has provided a certain comfort that was surely challenged in the
modest time that I spent at Sethokga Chapter four examines what has been the states
approach to hostel conversion
Page | 58
The statesrsquo approach to hostel conversion
4 Introduction
The discussion in this chapter will reflect and review South African state policy post-1994
that concerns hostels Chapter four will also critically discuss and describe the
fundamentals of what have been considered two of the leading approaches to hostel
redevelopment conversion namely the Hostel Redevelopment Programmes (HRP) and
the Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach
There have been a number of state interventions post-1994 that have seemingly been a
lsquosignrsquo of governments lsquodesirersquo to improve the living conditions of not just hostel residents
but of a vast majority of South Africanrsquos who were subjected to poor living conditions
(Thurman 1997) However for the purpose of this study there will be particular focus on
interventions around hostels In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005) concur with a few
other authors that during post democracy the South African government introduced
along with other housing programmes a hostel upgrading conversion programme
aimed primarily at converting hostels into integrated family-oriented developments
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
South Africarsquos housing policy was launched in 1994 and the housing subsidy scheme
promised to deliver one million houses in five years (UrbanLankMark 2011) This would be
delivered through a range of subsidy mechanisms (UrbanLankMark 2011) According to
Dyiki interview(2015) in 1995 or about 1996 a National Hostel Redevelopment Policy was
approved and was among one of the primary national housing programmes (Dyiki
interview 2015) To facilitate nation-building and effective state formation it was believed
that social programmes such as state funded housing programmes would play a pivotal
role in this regard (Netshitenzhe 2011) Moreover the nation-building agenda saw the
government set the country bold and far-reaching goals and these somewhat became
associated with certain policies ideologies and norms (Netshitenzhe 2011) However
redundant budgetary rituals inadequate feasibility studies weak project evaluation
bureaucratic inefficiency managing community expectations and political interference
have been some of the issues that have held back progress (von Holdt 2010 and
Pienaar 2010) As a result housing provided by government has often been poorly
Page | 59
located and in some respect it has continued to perpetuate a reality of spatial
segregation (Charlton et al 2014)
This next section will describe how the hostel conversion approach has been articulated
through state policy through subsequent grants and schemes
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach
Through the provision of grants and schemes government has made efforts to provide
funding for the redevelopment conversion of hostels However there has been
somewhat of a bias on public sector hostels as the grants are provided mainly for the
redevelopment conversion of hostels owned by municipalities or provincial government
(Department of Human Settlements 2015) In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
provide a synopsis of some of governmentsrsquo earliest approaches to addressing lsquothe hostel
issuersquo (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) This is summarised as follows
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Peoples Housing Process
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme (this will be discussed in
section 42)
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Arguably the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units
Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of state efforts to grapple with the vast
challenges around hostels hostel life and the social ills that have become endemic to
hostels (Dyiki 2006) The essence of the approaches listed below was that hostels would
be redeveloped converted to create sustainable human living conditions To re-
integrated these hostel communities into the surrounding township communities (Pienaar
and Cloete 2005)
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership was premised on
the notion that Developers this could also include the municipality would be able to
submit project proposals for the development of housing on stands that were serviced for
people who qualified in terms of eligibility criteria eg a combined household income of
Page | 60
the beneficiary versus the available subsidy amount provided by the state Households
would then be required to contribute to the development (that is the construction of their
house) from their own savings or through what was referred to as lsquosweet equityrsquo
(providing their own material and labour) Locational and geographic factors would also
affect the amount of the subsidy by 2005 Pienaar and Cloete (2005) noted that this
subsidy had delivered an approximate 13 million homes which were primarily low-cost
free-standing
In the case of hostels redevelopment one option was that the subsidy could be used to
build new free-standing dwellings for individual full title ownership on unused portions of
land within hostel complexes This option would require sub-division of the land as well as
the installation of additional service Under the provisions of the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme another option would be to convert existing dormitories into family
apartments that could be sold off to beneficiaries under sectional title This sectional title
is a form of ownership where an individual holds title to a dwelling unit it can be a free-
standing unit or part of a multi-unit storey building The individual owns title together
with all the other owners of sectional dwellings on that property an undivided share of the
land on which the dwellings are built (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) However the challenge
was that where existing dormitories were converted and sold under title the projects
would be exposed to a host of problems that sectional title properties generally
encountered in low-income areas in the private sector ie poor management and
maintenance and difficulties in collecting levies and service debts (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process
The Peoplersquos Housing Process was reportedly introduced to enable communities
particularly those in disadvantaged areas to participate in the provision of their own
housing without the participation interference or involvement of private developers
However technical and administrative support and consultation would be offered by
Housing Support Organisations which were approved to serve this function (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005) What were termed as facilitation grants would be made available by the
government to lsquokick-startrsquo the housing projects The beneficiaries could apply for a grant
to pay for the services rendered by the Housing Support Organisation(s) and the housing
subsidy would be the same as for what was contained in the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) hostel residents could as a
community collective make use of this avenue as a means of obtaining ownership of an
improved residence with the assistance of their local authority a non-governmental
Page | 61
organisation (NGO) or perhaps a cluster of professions who could provide support and
administrative assistance as their Housing Support Organisation (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing was introduced in 1995 and was essentially a
variant of the project-linked subsidy provided to non-profit institutions independent of
government and registered as legally approved entities Households earning less than
R3500 per month would be provided through this subsidy with subsidised rental housing
by these entities In 1995 when the subsidy was introduced it carried a once-off capital
grant of R16 000 per dwelling but by 2002 the amount had increased to R27 000 as part of
the governmentrsquos aspiration to promote medium density housing Pienaar and Cloete
(2005) note that because the hostel redevelopment programme had been in limbo for
several years at the time of their study the Institutional Subsidy approach had been
considered as a viable alternative to accelerate hostel conversion projects The tenure
options under this subsidy it was proposed would include
Rental
Co-operative ownership
An instalment sale option in the form of a lsquorent to buyrsquo practice with a
minimum rental period of four years to qualify for the conversion to ownership
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Under the National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
the National Housing Code (for subsidised housing) delineates subsidised housing as
Permanent residential structures that have security of tenure both internal
and external privacy
Housing that has portable water serviced with adequate energy and sanitary
facilities
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing were set
to give effect to the objectives of the Housing Act 1997 which came into effect on 1 April
Page | 62
1998 To ensure quality and durable housing products that complied with particular
minimum standards (National Housing Report 2009) For instance dwellings had to have
a minimum gross floor area of 30m2 but this has since been amended (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005)
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country
Some international interest has been generated to consider intervention in hostels and
efforts to redevelopingconverting hostels The point of this section is to illustrate that
hostels occupied and in some respect have continued to occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are one of many representations of
the physical manifestation of three centuries of systematic racial discrimination and
economic exploitation (Thurman 1997) The consolidation of the migrant labour system
through hostels the poor living conditions of hostels the dishonour of hostel life and the
control they exert on the African populace Saw hostels gaining the attention of a
number of international agencies and authorities who put resources towards and took an
interest in reconfiguring the disposition of hostels (Dyiki interview 2015)
In the period between August 2002 and April 2003 the USAID (United States Agency for
International Development) extended its support to community based approaches to
housing in South Africa and in turn created a platform where it would have input(s) into
South Africarsquos national housing policy (Urban Sector Network 2003)
Hostel redevelopment was supported under a grant provision provided by the USAID this
had two main objectives The first was that policy and information dissemination should
serve as key objectives and secondly that USAID would have a voice in the facilitation of
hostel redevelopments Initially the grant was meant to run from 23 August 2000 to 30
August 2002 but an extension was requested and the grant extended for the period 1
September 2002 to 30 April 2003 (Urban Sector Network 2003) Additionally the on-goings
of the programme instituted under the grant were to include the following activities
Identifying and conducting research into tenure options and feasible
management models for hostels
Identifying possible needs and challenges and to then conduct nation-wide
research in the hostel sector
Facilitating workshops and consolidating policy submissions and to submit
research papers to the Department of Housing
Page | 63
To publish research papers
To conduct mid-term and final evaluation of the programme
Conducting information outreaches where the USN (Urban Sector Network) would
play an essential role in informing government the private sector as well as
communities about the opportunities which could be created through the
redevelopment of hostels (Urban Sector Network2003)
The Urban Sector Network (USN) then proceeded to make specific recommendations on
the hostel redevelopment approach The USN called for the broadening on the scope of
the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme to include all hostels (private and
grey sector) and not just public sector hostel Recommendations were made that the
norms and standards for the redeveloped hostels should be developed along with
national guidelines for the management of redeveloped hostels by local authorities They
advocated for stronger support for co-operative housing The redevelopment of hostels
to be approached in an integrated and holistic manner and hostels should not be
redeveloped in an isolated manner The subsidy amount for hostels redevelopment and
social facilitation needed to be increased Lastly that hostels redevelopment should
support livelihood strategies and capacity building and training of hostel residents during
the redevelopment process was essential (Urban Sector Network 2003)
The USN proposed a departure from the public sector hostel redevelopment bias of the
Hostel Redevelopment plan (Urban Sector Network 2003)
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme (HRP)
In principal the Hostel Redevelopment Programme supported an unambiguous bias in
favour of public sector hostels (Dyiki 2006) Public sector hostels are those hostels
owned by either provincial or local authorities that offered accommodation to workers
from a range of industries (Thurman 1997) Grey sector hostels (in which the structures
wereare owned by private companies but the land by a provincial or local authority
and private sector hostels) did not form part of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme
(Dyiki 2006) The biggest limitation and challenge of the HRP was in its narrow focus on
solely the conversion of hostels beds (Thurman 1997) The aim of the HRP was to provide
a subsidy allocation that was based per bed but it was criticised as being impractical
and unfeasible and not adequately addressing the issue of housing provision (Dyiki
2006) Dyiki interview (2015) believes that the challenge of the HRP was that it was not
talking to individuals but rather it was a subsidy given to the state to improve the hostel
and the standard of living in the hostel Since most of the public sector hostels were
Page | 64
managed by the municipalities the municipalities received the subsidy and the
residents of the hostels therefore had very little say in how the subsidy could in effect be
used The other challenge was that grey sector and public sector hostels were not part
of the subsidy (Dyiki interview 2015)
The Hostel Redevelopment Programme was perhaps the earliest strategy conceived by
the South African government as a national policy aiming to
Promote habitable and humane conditions in hostel conversions
Ensure the involvement of hostel residents the surroundingneighbouring
community and relevant (publicprivate) authorities and any other entity
affected by the project are involved in the decision-making processes
Facilitate and promote social integration within hostel communities and the
hostels and adjacent communities
Put measures in place to accommodate any persons displaced by the hostel
conversion project
Empower promote economic development and seeks to be development-
oriented
According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment
Programme was largely based on the premise that this programme would make some
provisions for grant funding from the central government towards the conversion or
upgrading of hostels particularly public sector or grey-sector hostels This will be done with
the broad aim of the programme to facilitate and create living conditions for residents
that are humane and hygienic by providing prospects for housing options that are
affordable and sustainable With tenure options for
Rental
Possible ownership for those at the lower income scale
Upon its conception a capital subsidy of R16 000 was initially proposed per family or R4
000 per individual Additionally to be eligible for this programme hostel redevelopment
programmes would need to be
Planned and implemented in a participative and comprehensive manner
with the requirement that interest groups would need to be established
Based on socio-economic studies undertaken to determine and consider the
needs and affordability aspect of those who would be affected (ie stand to
benefit from the project)
Page | 65
Unfailing in ensuring that there is no displacement of residents unless
alternative accommodation is provided
Sustainable with regards to the on-going payments of maintenance and any
other related costs
Purposeful to augment employment opportunities for the hostel residents as
well as the locals in the construction and on-going maintenance of the
project
The broad aim of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme (Mdunyelwa 2015) was to
convert these historically male-occupied spaces which were also subsequently meant
for migrant labourers to family units But it will be done in such a way to able and
capacitate the accommodation of the families of these men In some way but perhaps
not explicitly stated in the Hostel Redevelopment Programme policy brief there is an
element of urbanisation that is implied Therefore it was an attempt to somewhat
encourage the men to relocate their families from their rural home-base (Mdunyelwa
2015)
The shortcomings of the HRP in how it had a restricted focus on hostel beds and
somewhat of an oversight on the complexity of the configuration of hostels saw it being
replaced by the Community Residential Units Programme (CRU) (Pienaar 2010) Dyiki
interview (2015) in my interview with him argued that the CRU Programme unlike the HRP
contains a lot more detail that was perhaps missed in the HRP He further suggested that
the CRU Programme could be considered somewhat of a lsquocost recoveryrsquo strategy by
government to recoup some of the monies spent on these projects As the CRU
programme has a strong rental housing stock component to it (Dyiki interview 2015)
44 The Community Residential Units Programme (CRU Programme)
The Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme has since replaced the National
Hostel Redevelopment Programme At the time of this study there are approximately
2000 public hostels across the country with a vast majority of them still needing to be
afforded some attention and measures to redevelop them (Demacon 2014) According
to the Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the CRU Programme (2006)
the CRU Programme aims to facilitate the provision of secure and stable rental tenure for
lower income persons Furthermore stating that the programme seeks to provide a
framework for addressing the many and varied forms of existing public sector residential
accommodation as the previous approach under the HRP only considered a ldquoper-bedrdquo
Page | 66
approach that proved unfavourable on a number of occasions (CRU Programme Policy
Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme is believed to provide a lsquobetterrsquo suited programme and a coherent
framework to assist in dealing with a vast range of public stock which has for the most
part been indecisively and incomprehensively dealt with (Demacon 2014) The CRU
Programme targets low income individuals as well as households with an average R 3500
monthly income and who have not been able to find suitable accommodation
According to the CRU Programme in the years leading up to 2006 there was an
approximate 4512 of households nationally which fall within the R0-R800 income groups
currently renting and an approximate 4027 falling within the R801 ndash R3200 income
groups (CRU Programme Policy Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme intends to cover the following areas
a) Public hostels that are owned by Provincial Housing Departments and municipalities
b) ldquoGreyrdquo hostels which are hostel that have both a public and private ownership
component due to historical reasons
c) Public housing stock that forms part of the ldquoEnhanced Extended Discount Benefit
Schemerdquo but which cannot be transferred to individual ownership and has to be
managed as rental accommodation by the public owner
d) Post-1994 newly developed public residential accommodation owned by provincial
housing departments and municipalities
e) Existing dysfunctional abandoned andor distressed buildings in inner city or township
areas that have been taken over by a municipality and funded by housing funds
(Department of Human Settlements 2015)
The CRU programme policy document is quite a laborious document In general the CRU
programme seeks to promote and advance the provision of rental options for lower
income groups facilitate communication and participation of residents throughout the
process provide a variety of rental stock and provide secure and stable rental stock This
will be done by what the CRU Programme articulates as providing a realistic funding
programme (Department of Human Settlements 2015)
According to the CRU programme rental stock provided by the programme is to be
owned by either a provincial housing department or a municipality However this has
been a seriously contested position on the part of the individuals and households
affected by the programme who want home ownership (Dyiki interview 2015)
Page | 67
45 Conclusion
There have been a number of projects over the past several years which have in part
articulated the states aspiration to reconfigure the lsquoway of lifersquo in hostels The Hostel
Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units Programme are
considered to have been the leading approaches to reconfiguring hostels within the
countryrsquos broader landscape Whether hostels have or do not have a place in
democratic South Africa is part of what this study is looking to explore
Chapter five introduces the Sethokga hostel conversion project and in principal seeks to
unpack the conceptualisation of the project while reflecting on the findings of the
interviews
Page | 68
The Sethokga hostel conversion project
5 Introduction
Chapter five will examine the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seek to unpack
how the project has been conceptualised Discussing the main components of the
project its main stakeholders the project phases exploring what are its defining
characteristics the broad vision and aim of the project how the project has understood
the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn set to address them and then also
in what way(s) the residents of the hostel have been involved in the project Furthermore
this chapter will examine what the project considers important in terms of gender issues
what have been some limitations of the project while it also considers what the
anticipated impact and benefit of the project is
Lastly and in view of the interviews that were conducted chapter five discusses how the
residents of the hostel and the community of Tembisa and greater Ekurhuleni will know
that the project has been completed and has been successful By and large this chapter
offers testament of the findings from the field work and reviews the rationale of the
Sethokga conversion project To conclude this chapter a collage of diagrams and
images will be presented to provide the reader with greater insight(s) into the Sethokga
hostel conversion project
51 Outline of the main components of the project
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project
There have been a number of stakeholders involved in the Sethokga hostel conversion
project the main stakeholders include
o The Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement (GPDHS)
o LTE Consulting
o The Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
o The ward councillor and various community committees and leaders
o The Sethokga Hostel residents
o The community of Tembisa
Page | 69
The roles of the stakeholders are summarised as follows National government is the key
funder of the Sethokga hostel conversion project the funds are transferred to the GPDHS
who have to then ensure that the costs of the project are managed LTE Consulting is a
consulting company appointed by the GPDHS for the oversight and construction of the
Sethokga hostel conversion project They work in collaboration with the EMM (the local
authority) and its various departments such as the services department the energy
department quality assurance etc However the GPDHS remains the lsquomain decision-
makerrsquo and lsquocustodianrsquo of the project with the lead oversight on the budget and
programmeproject management The project manager Mr Sisa Majikijela is the official
from the GPDHS that is directly responsible for supervision and coordination of the
project The ward councillor and the various community committees leaders facilitate
avenues of communication and engagement between the officials (from province the
EMM and LTE) with the residents of Sethokga and community lsquoAs the eyes and ears on
the groundrsquo (Majikijela interview 2015) ideally the ward councillor and various
community committees leaders have an important role to play in ensuring that the
Sethokga residents and community will be the rightful recipients of the project The
Sethokga hostel residents and broader community have a vested interest in the project
because it stands to affect andor benefit them (Sololo interview2015)
Once the project is completed with the family units fully constructed (ie with furnishings
such as trees plants parking bays and so forth) and the services installed The project will
be handed over to the EMM for on-going administration maintenance and the
collection of rentals (Shibambo interview 2015) The Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlement in collaboration with the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and LTE
Consulting play a key role as facilitates of the conversion of Sethokga hostel into family
units (Majikijela interview 2015)
522 Project phases
The data regarding the project phases was easily accessible and generously provided by
the consulting resident engineer and the architect providing me with a market analysis
study and a few other key documents The development concept of the hostel
conversion project divides the project into three phases and further subdivides each of
the phases into two phases phases A and B (Demacon 2014)
Initial studies (ie pre-feasibility studies) were done in 2008 but the demolition of the first
four blocks of the hostel demolished for the current phase 1A only took place in August of
2011 and it was anticipated that phase 1A would be completed and handed over to the
Page | 70
municipality by the end of 2014 but this did not happen (Majikijela interview 2015) At the
time of conducting fieldwork between the months of August and September 2015 it was
said that phase 1A was near completion with just the landscaping parking and water
provision left to completed (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
Phase 1A of the project was meant to bring to completion a total of 240 units
accommodating 1 194 people to provide 69 parking bays (one per four units) a total of
54 one bedroom units 117 two bedroom units and 69 three bedroom units at an average
unit size of 324m2 477m2 and 588m2 for the one two and three bedrooms respectively
(Demacon 2014) However only a total of 222 units have been built and this shortfall was
largely attributed to the underlying dolomite geological conditions of the site (Bako and
Shibambo interview 2015)
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
The Sethokga hostel conversion project has been administered under the CRU
programme and forms part of a national agenda to convert hostels into family units
(Dyiki interview 2015) The target group under the CRU programme is individuals and
households earning between R800 and R3 500 per month who are able to enter what the
CRU programme has termed the lsquoformal private rental and social housing marketrsquo
(Demacon 2014)
The new residential units (the family units) are situated on ervan 128 and 5729 of the
Sethokga complex within the administrative jurisdiction of the Kempton Park Customer
Care Area (CCA) which is the administrative body conducting oversight of development
and town planning affairs for the Tembisa and Kempton Park areas (Demacon 2014)
The family units are three storey walk-ups and appear somewhat spacious and far more
appealing than the hostel structures The CRU proposes that bachelorsone bedroom
units of 20m2 to 35m2 should be allocated at a monthly rental of R270 ndash R450 a two
bedroom unit of 35m2-45m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R450 to R850 and
that a three bedroom unit of 45m2-80m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R850 ndash
R1650 Rentals have been and remain a contestation in a number of hostel conversion
projects across the country and Sethokga is no different According to the economic
representative for the ward Sololo interview (2015) the residents of Sethokga hostel are
contesting that they want to pay R150 for a one bedroom unit R200 for a two bedroom
unit and R300 for a three bedroom unit
According to the principles of the CRU programme the ownership of the rental housing
stock is to be reserved by either the Gauteng Provincial Department of Human
Page | 71
Settlement (GPDHS) or the EMM The ownership of the family units can be transferred by
the GPDHS to the EMM in line with the Housing Act no right(s) of ownership can be
transferred to tenants (Pienaar 2010)
The process of the Sethokga hostel conversion has on an administrative and government
support level been facilitated through a grant allocation from national government to
province (GPDHS) This grant has made provisions for pre-feasibility studies
socialcommunity facilitation the relocationreallocation of some residents (within the
hostel or to alternative sites to make way for demolition and construction of phase 1A)
and the consideration and compensation of construction costs and professional fees
(Majikijela interview 2015) The allocation of the units determining rental structures
applying indigent relief measures where necessary rental collection and maintenance
as well as the management of the family units are factors determined by the GPDHS and
the EMM cooperatively (Sololo interview 2015) The hostel residents are then at some
level consulted and lsquoencouragedrsquo to participate in this regard (Dyiki interview 2015)
Seemingly throughout project implementation the stakeholders have been kept informed
of the status and progress of the project With respect to notifying the hostel residents and
general public notices are placed in and around the hostel to inform them of meetings
and the ward councillorrsquos office take the lead on this (Mthethwa interview 2015)
There have been a number of communitypublic meetings that have taken place as the
project has progressed From the fieldwork I was not able to draw on precisely how many
meetings had taken place since or precisely when the meetings took place or what was
discussed in each of those meetings Generally the ward councillor said at least once a
month a consultative and progress report meeting would take place between the
various stakeholders where officials would engage the hostel residents and general
public
According to Majikijela interview (2015) the ward councillor and the economic rep the
main area of involvement on the part of the hostel residents has been in providing
labour A small percentage of the residents have been involved in the construction-work
and some of the clerical work on the project Their involvement in discussions on the
project is said to often be arbitrarily halted by political interference (Sololo interview
2015) For instance Bako interview (2015) the architect recalled that on the design of the
family units Liefa Architects did not talk to the end user ie the residents to ask them
what they wanted Instead a design which was informed by other examples of similar
projects was presented to the residents of Sethokga and the general public (Bako
interview 2015) ldquoThe design of the hostel was not lsquoexclusiversquo to Sethokga and its contextrdquo
(Bako interview 2015)
Page | 72
In relation to the size of the hostel and its residents only a very small percentage of the
hostel residents have been employed in the project the December 2013 January 2014
labour records reported the following
Table 1
Total workforce 66
Females 7
Males 59
Youth 28
Adults 38
Semi-skilled 20
Skilled 22
Disabled 0
General workers 24
Source LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor report
I was fortunate to have attended one of the community meetings that were held at an
old community hall within the vicinity of the hostel This meeting took place on a
Saturday the 15th of August 2015 and it was quite the experience There was a relatively
strong police presence at the meeting The police kept watch and managed the
activities inside and outside the community hall As there were concerns that the
proceedings might get out of hand and a possible tussle between those in attendance
might arise The meeting was chaired by the ward councillor and aside from the residents
of Sethokga in attendance was one official from the GPDHS an official from the EMM
community leaders and ANC committee members
There was an obvious and overwhelming male presence in the meeting tempers ran
high and there was an observable resistance from the residents of Sethokga to the
presence of the three females in the meeting This included me and two female
committee members Several times the meeting was disrupted by shouts and echoes of
discontentment questioning what women were doing at a meeting for men lsquordquothey have
no place here they do not even live hererdquo were the words of some of the men Our
presence seemed to really infuriate some of the men This was similar to what Ramphele
(1993) Segal (1991) Thurman (1997) and Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) observed in
their work and suggested that even now and within the context of Sethokga that the
men in the hostel are still quite at odds with having women as a part of their lsquogathering of
Page | 73
menrsquo and possibly even living among them The demeanour of some of the men in this
meeting suggested that they found the presence and role of women in these meetings
unneeded It was evident that these men had become far too accustomed to living
lsquoalonersquo as men Ramphele (1993) noted that the idea of an unambiguous constant and
unrestricted presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a serious point
of contention for some of men Some men expressed unwillingness while others a
struggle to comprehend or endorse this change that seemed overly unfamiliar and
challenging to come to grips with (Ramphele 1993) From my observation in this meeting
the same seems to hold true for Sethokga
The purpose of the meeting was to consult the hostel residents who were identified to be
the first recipients beneficiaries of the allocating of family units to consult them on issues
of final rental proposals allocation processes and status of the project The invitation for
this meeting was apparently only extended to those particular individuals but
subsequently the meeting was taken over by those who had objections to the process of
allocation rentals and why the meeting sought to exclude them and divide the residents
Generally the meeting was unruly and the ward councillor as well as the community
leaders and committee members struggled to manage the crowd and the rampant
tempers in the room
The agenda for the meeting is provided below to provide the reader with some context
and outline of the intension of the meeting Unfortunately tempers ran especially high in
this meeting and in my opinion none of the items on the agenda were successfully
addressed
Page | 74
Figure 8 August 15 community meeting agenda
Source Sethokga Community meeting 2015
521 Broad vision and aim of the project
The vision and aim of the project was described by the key informants who to some
extent unanimously used the following key words integration sustainability community
participation to improve peoplersquos lives restoring honour addressing the ills of hostel life
and bringing families into a safe and secure environment The housing officer for me
captured well the overall sentiments of the key informants when he said ldquowe are
surrounded and have so many companies in Tembisa so clearly you will find letrsquos say a
white guy working in the area but then they travel to Kempton Park or some other area
outside Tembisa and that is where they live So it would be nice to see him living in
Sethokga The project is about integration and not just integrating the residents of
Page | 75
Sethokga to the rest of the township but other ways of integration like racial integration
That is what I want to seerdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015)
Additionally the broad vision and aim of the hostel conversion project is to instil a culture
of payment into not just the hostel but the broader community ldquoPeople cannot just keep
wanting everything for free government cannot afford itrdquo The interviewees that
expressed this position were Majikijela Sololo Mthethwa Dyiki Bako and Shibambo
Seemingly under the CRU programme the project would seek to influence and instil this
culture of payment through the rental housing stock focus of the programme That
largely seeks to promote government owned and managed rental housing stock a
departure from the lsquofreersquo housing approach (Bako interview 2015)
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga development
Source Liefa Architects 2015
Phase 1B Phase 2B Phase 3B
Phase 1A Phase 2A
Phase 3A
Page | 76
What was surprising to me was that the family units are not intended to be occupied by
current residents only The idea is that some of the current residents would live elsewhere
and when this question was posed to the official from the GPDHS Majikijelarsquos interview
(2015) response was that the hostel residents who did not qualify in terms of the required
criteria for the renting of the units would be allocated RDPs in the neighbouring area of
Esselen Park but he could not provide clarity as to how and when this would happen
The vision of Sethokga that can be seen from the plan provided below is a reconfigured
locality Rehabilitated single-sex compounds into self contained family units furnished
with child care facilities park(s) garden(s) a community centre recreation facilities and
parking areas
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn
set out to address those needs and challenges
Although the CRU Programme only sets particular administrative operational and
project facilitation guidelines Arguably these guidelines do in some respect address
a number of the ills associated with hostels such as the issue of overcrowding lack of
privacy and poor living conditions (Pienaar 2010) Within Sethokga there are
challenges of tribalism high prevalence of HIV drug abuse alcohol abuse
criminality overcrowding lack of privacy possible health hazards a lack of ablution
facilities The hostel being unsafe for women (especially those who are staying in the
hostel illegally) was identified and shared by the key informants as some of the major
challenges confronting the hostel This view was shared by the ward councillor the
housing officer from the EMM the project manager from the GPDHS the consulting
engineer and the wardrsquos economic representative
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi the issue of tribalism occurred
as a result of what he recalls as a defining political shift ldquoafter the release of Mandela
and when they started preaching lsquothis thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions
happened according to who was Zulu or Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Here the ward councillor explains what he saw as
some of the factors that led to what is currently the strong predominance of Pedi and
Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel suggesting that
ldquoThey were mixed here when they started talking about negotiations that
there must be elections and then the IFP (Inkatha Freedom Party) was
rejecting that and that had nothing to do with membership it was a situation
of the warlords the Zulursquos terrorizing the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa
Page | 77
and standing with the white man The Zulursquos did not like that so that is where
the Zulu and Xhosa divide started and that is when you found that in
Sethokga it became predominantly more Xhosa there was fighting and war
the Zulursquos were chasing people out of their territory at the other hostels The
Xhosarsquos ran to Sethokga There was fighting everywhere even here in
Sethokga and all over the Pedis Vendas Tsongarsquos they all ran away from
those hostels where they were being chased out and they came hererdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
It was unclear as to the extent to which the project dealt with any of these
challenges and how or if they were factored into the project The project seems to
have a general lsquobest practicersquo approach to hostel conversion irrespective of the
circumstance of a particular hostel
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project
ldquoThe political volatility of the project poses an enormous threat to the successful
allocationletting of the family unitsrdquo (Majikijela interview 2015) On the part of the
key informants their continued inability to answer the perhaps not so simple question
of what would happen to those who could not afford the monthly rental of the family
units This suggested that the issue of rentals has remained a grey area even as the
project heads towards project completion ldquoWe will worry about that when we get
thererdquo was the brisk response to my inquiry on this matter Similar to what was
observed by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in the City Deep Redevelopment
project Sethokga faces a similar challenge
Certainly public community participation in any context is a complex and at times a
contentious exercise (Mdunyelwa 2015) I remain hesitant whether the Sethokga
hostel conversion project has been able to lsquotrulyrsquo engage residents and the broader
community in a transparent and reciprocal manner Seemingly affordability will be
the determining factor of who will be able to rent a unit To those who cannot afford
it stands to be seen what remedy will be extended to them
Moreover the following factors were cited as some of the limitations of the project
the lack of transparency political interference an inadequate dissemination of
information to residentscommunity and the projects failure to respond to what the
solution(s) will be for lsquonon-qualifyingrsquo residents who cannot afford the monthly rentals
Page | 78
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful
I wanted to find out from the key informants particularly those who have been
directly involved in the conversion project what for them would constitute a
successful project and how from their point of view the residents and the greater
community would know that the project is completed and has been
successfulunsuccessful Overall the leading response was that a project would be
successful when the family units are occupied Some of the interviewees added that
the process of allocating the units and resolving the myriad of issues are most
certainly likely to cause further delays and will require intricate resolution (ie peoplersquos
unwillingness and otherrsquos inability to pay tension and opposition to paying rentals
opening the letting to tenants who are not hostel residents and so forth)
In summary the thoughts shared by the housing office at the EMM and the wardrsquos
economic representative capture in essence the general position held by every one
of the key informants
ldquoFor me a complete project will be the units functioning on their own and then
people will be told during a public meeting We also need to involve the mayor the
MECs and the media People will be told that it is finished and this is what is going to
happenrdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015) ldquoAfter it has been completed I want to see 80
percent of the people who have been staying in the hostel still residing in the hostel
It must not just be open to whomever There are people as far as Johannesburg who
want to stay here because they see it being comfortable and nice forgetting we are
looking to improve the lives of the current hostel dwellers There are even those in the
township who think that people of the hostel cannot pay so this is not for themrdquo
(Sololo interview 2015)
Page | 79
53 Visual narrative of the family units
531 Architectural designsplans
The design of the family units is what the architect referred to as a multi-storey approach
ldquoThe three storey walk-ups address the need for housing much better than an RDP wouldrdquo
(Bako interview 2015) They have an urban apartment-like feel about them but the
mundane (uniform) paintwork gives them a distinct government provided social housing feel
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development plan
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 80
Figure 12 Architects Section E - E
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 11 Architects Section F ndash F
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 13 South Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 81
Figure 14 North Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 15 East Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 16 West Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 82
532 The project site of family units
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site
View of the site of the family units from one of
the hostel blocks situated adjacent to the
construction site across the street
Construction of the family units
commenced in August of 2011
Site notice placed at the entrance of the
family units construction site
The Sethokga community hall situated at
the entrance to the family units
construction site and adjacent to the
council offices
Page | 83
For the most partthe construction of the
family units is nearing completetion
Walking through the site personally I felt that
the family units had a somewhat prominent
RDP lsquolookrsquo about them
Ground floor view
The entrance into the construction site of the
family units and the site office which is
situtated within the vicinity of the site
Page | 84
533 Inside the Family units
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units
Doorway into one of the three bedroom
family units which leads into an open plan
dining and kitchen area
Each unit has its own dining sitting and
kitchen area
The construction site is lsquopolicedrsquo by the Red
Ants (a private security company)around the
clock and also a private security company
Some of the security members seen on site
they insisted I take a picture of them to
include in this study
Page | 85
Built-in sink and geyser
The family
units offer a number of distinct qualities that
the hostel clearly does not have which
include privacy and a dignified living
environmentspace
Each unit has its bathroom with a built-in
toilet bath and shower
Shower
Separate and additional toilet as part of the
three bedroom family units
The diningsitting area and two adjacent
bedrooms
Page | 86
The site of the family units is being guarded by a private security company and members
of the Red Ants (a private security company) When asked about this the official (the
project manager overseeing the Sethokga hostel conversion project) from the GPDHS
said that this was necessary to ensure that no unauthorised occupations take place This
was also to guard against any possible vandalism or the looting of materialsequipment
or the site office (Majikijela interview 2015)
54 Summary of main themes and findings
This study had a number of themes which resonate with the case study The localised
context of Sethokga hostel offered great insights into the current state of hostels as
spaces and places that still largely exist within a context of volatility poor living conditions
and complex socio-economic challenges (Thurman 1997) The historic exploits on hostels
revealed and I suppose confirmed that the hostel system was established supported and
perpetuated by methodical policy and controls to discourage the permanent settlement
of Africans in urban areas or any intention of relocating their family to urban areas (Segal
1991) Furthermore within the contemporary South African context this has posed a
number of challenges and has been a longstanding reality of a number of hostel dwellers
as observed in the work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010)
The view from one of the family units (a ground
floor three bedroom unit) is onto the ward
councillorrsquos offices and the hostel in the
distance
One of the three bedrooms in the family
units
Page | 87
Sethokga hostel is also one of many hostels that exist within a historically-laden context
The strong prominence of Pedi and Xhosa native speaking men in some respect also
speaks to the events of circular migration that are still a lived-reality of the men of
Sethokga This according to the ward councillor has meant that the men have had to
maintain ties with their families in the Eastern Cape and Limpopo while most of them live
in Sethokga away from their families (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) In terms of gender
issues the aspect of men and housing the hostel conversion project does not adopt a
particular stand on this Seemingly the project makes no effort to appreciate the
apparent rural location of the wives partners children and families of a vast majority of
the men in Sethokga The idea is that anyone who is able to afford the monthly rental of
the family units can sign a lease agreement and rent a unit However this presents a
number of issues and leaves a lot unaccounted for and unanswered ie will the families
of the men in the hostels make a transition to join them in the family units Is this even a
possibility for them what impact would this have on the already stretched social
amenities in the area Arguably in the case of Sethokga this oversight has been a serious
area of contention and has amplified the political volatility of the project
The heavy-handedness of the hostel system cunningly imposed a sense of no escape
yet quite interestingly the later unwillingness to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have their
hostel converted into family units (Thurman 1997)
Among the key findings of the research report is that the lsquorental onlyrsquo tenure option and
approach to the hostel conversion project was the biggest challenge and one of the
most critical points of contention (Pienaar 2010) On the one hand the hostel residents
are arguing that they cannot afford the proposed rentals while on the other hand
officials are of the opinion that this is in fact untrue and not wholly representative of the
attitude(s) of all the hostel residents Thus a supposed unwillingness to pay and a culture
of entitlement was cited by the key informants as the underlying state of affairs and one
that posed the biggest threat to the project and in particular how the family units would
be allocated
Although the project is for the most part about converting Sethokga hostel into family
units in principal it is also about redress integration improving the living conditions of
Sethokga residents reconfiguring the mental and physical landscape of hostels in
contemporary South Africa and introducing children and women into the hostel
Integration was repeatedly cited by the key informants as the main imperative of the
study Political interference and the very particular sensitivities around political allegiance
Page | 88
(keeping in the mind the local elections are fast approaching) are factors that were
cited would cause the greatest difficulty in the allocation of the family units
54 Conclusion
Undoubtedly the Sethokga hostel conversion project has a number of components and
features to it that are complex in part ambiguous and would require further and more
detailed study Seemingly the CRU programme is a lsquodeparturersquo from the Hostel
Redevelopment Programme In part it offers prospects to facilitate the provision of
affordable rental tenure for those earning below R3500 while seeking to promote the
integration of publicsocial housing into the broader housing market Under the
administration of the CRU programme one of the leading aims is to facilitate the creation
of sustainable public housing assets (Pienaar 2010) However the CRU programme has
been criticised as a framework that is largely operating in a policy environment that is
hostile elaborate and not speaking to the needs of the people on the ground
Furthermore many see it as solely a hostel upgrading policy viewed often to be done
impromptu in response to local pressures (Pienaar 2010) To paraphrase Pienaar (2010)
the vagueness regarding the roles and responsibilities of the respective provincial
department of human settlement and municipalities has not provided much confidence
in hostel conversion projects
Chapter five has examined the Sethokga hostel conversion project and attempted to
unpack how the project has been conceptualised This chapter has identified and
outlined the main components of the project its main stakeholders and what has been
their role in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Discussed were the project phases a
number of critical elements such as how the project has understood the needs and
challenges of the hostel residents In addition to this chapter five outlined the way(s) in
which the residents have been involved in the project if the project considered anything
important in terms of gender issues and if what have these been factored into the
project By and large chapter five drew extensively on the findings of the fieldwork and
made an effort to narrate some of the insights and perspectives shared by the key
informants To conclude the chapter a collage of diagrams and images were presented
to offer the reader a visual narrative of the site of the family units
Page | 89
Concluding chapter
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoWhat does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
61 Review and reflections
This research report consisted of six chapters chapter one introduced the study
chapter two provided the theoretical backdrop of the study chapter three
introduced the study area (Sethokga hostel) chapter four discussed the evolution of
hostel redevelopment conversion and what has been the states approach to hostel
conversion and chapter five examined the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project
In chapter one the main point of discussion was the research question outlining the
aim and objectives of the study and the research methodology
Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project been conceptualised
in how the project has been conceptualised does it address the stigma of hostel life
and it what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What informed the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail what is the broad aim and vision
of the project what is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
Page | 90
In chapter one it was also argued that this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects had somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore that there needed to be more inquiry and
study conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel
conversion projects
The studyrsquos theoretical backdrop was discussed in chapter two The aim of this was to
contextualise the term hostels as to clearly illustrate what is meant by it In addition
to drawing on particular strands of literature concepts ideas and arguments that
resonated with the study Chapter two argued that the historically the landscape of
hostels has by and large been complex at times perplexing and highly contentious
Chapter three introduced Sethokga hostel It elaborated on the locality of the hostel
and its local as well as municipal context A visual narrative of the hostel was also
provided and this captured the current state of the hostel and the conditions in which
its residents endure It was established that ironically the conditions in the hostel are
not much different to many of the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg
The hostel was badly designed poorly built and is suffering years of neglect it is in
appalling and overcrowded condition
Chapter four described the evolution of hostel redevelopment conversion in the
country and what has been the states approach to hostel conversion post-1994 This
chapter discussed in some detail the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme Arguing that these programmes have to
date been the lsquoforerunnersrsquo of the statersquos approach to addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo
While in chapter five the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
was examined Chapter five was the crux of this research report The discussions in the
chapters before it set up the groundwork for a critical exploration of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project and for unpacking the research question
Chapter six concludes this study and seeks to answer the question ldquoso what does this
mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo Since this
report was conducted as part of the requirements for the partial fulfilment of an
Urban and Regional Planning honours qualification It is important to address the ldquoso
what for plannersrsquo question and the value that this report stands to offer to the
Page | 91
planning profession Firstly let us reflect on what have been some of the limitations of
the study
62 Limitations of the study
For the most part this study had a wealth of information and sources to draw from
The insights and wisdom provided by the key informants were invaluable their
willingness and enthusiasm to participate in this study was not something I had
anticipated but I remain truly grateful
Due to certain constraints more especially time constraints and the particular scope
focus of the research report this posed some limitations to the study In only
interviewing and engaging with officials and not with the residents of Sethokga the
voices opinions and views of the officials told only one side of a many-sided story
How the project affects and has affected the residents Is this something they want
support and for those who do not what are some of their reasons for contention Is
circular migration still as prominent a feature within the current context of Sethokga
What is the present-day nature of household configurations in the hostels (is the duty
of the older men still to order the actions of the younger men ie the cleaning and up
keeping of the communal area and other household duties) what for the residents
of Sethokga would constitute a successful project
Even as this study concludes the side of the hostel residents remains largely untold
and unreported Furthermore the supposed apathy on the part of the hostel residents
and the views expressed by the key informants that family units offer the most ideal
and best alternative to the residents of Sethokga could not be explored and
interrogated further given the limitations of the scope of the study
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners
Within contemporary South Africa there have certainly been a vast number of
conflicting views held regarding what should be the role and future of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Although academics policy makers bureaucrats developers and
the general public have usually been unable to reach longstanding middle-ground
on what should be done about hostels One of the more widely held views is that
hostels certainly present a real challenge but also an opportunity For government
Page | 92
developers non-government organisations (NGOs) built environment practitioners
and needless to say the residents of hostels themselves (Thurman 1997)
Planners are frequently cast in the role of performing a balancing act (Campbell
2006) As a result the adaptability of the planning profession as a coherent and
impartial discipline has over the years become rather topical subjects (Campbell
2006) This has inevitably continued to require new and innovative ways of lsquoseeingrsquo
lsquocomprehendingrsquo and lsquodoingrsquo things in order to shape and re-shape an inherently
divergent and historic-laden urban landscape (Jupp and Inch 2012) In the midst of
the shifts in the traditional conception and role of the planning profession as a merely
procedural and administrative activity (Harrison and Kahn 2002) planning is still to a
great extent closely tied to government structures (Cornwall 2002) Therefore within
this particular context of government driven intervention urban planning
professionals stand to be instrumental facilitators of development and offer essential
expertise and tools towards addressing some of the challenges within our urban
landscape (Albert and Kramsch 1999)
This study observed a range of intertwined urban dynamics ie around housing socio-
economic distress a wavering political climate and the need to be more
environmentally conscientious This necessitates focused attention and much
consideration as the political economic social and environmental junctures in which
planning has come to operate has meant that the profession has become
susceptible to external pressures scrutiny and influence (Campbell and Marshall
2002)
64 Conclusion
South Africa has for a number of years into democracy been at a critical time of
limited housing supply and a desperate need for housing (Khan and Thurman 2001)
(Pienaar
2010) Planners have an important role to play in facilitating coordinating and
effecting the reconfiguration of the urban landscape towards improving the setting
of inherently socio-economically ailing spaces such as hostels (Jupp and Inch 2012)
Hostels have largely remained as spaces that have continued to perpetuate
underdevelopment inequality and disempowerment (Khan and Thurman 2001) If
family units are to wholly address the stigma of hostel life and the convoluted nature
Page | 93
of hostels to alter the landscape of hostels and define a novel future for hostels and
their residents It is certain that this will require decisive action collaborative efforts
and the wisdom of retrospection
Page | 94
List of references
African National Congress 1994 The Reconstruction and Development Programme A
policy framework ANC Johannesburg
African National Congress (2003) Briefing note 5 Housing
httpwwwancorgzaelections2004briefingshousingpdf
Albert A and Kramsch O (1999) Space Inequality and Difference lsquoRadical Turns
and lsquoCultural Termsrdquo European Planning Studies 7(1) 77 ndash 79
Bandyopadhyay S and Green E (2008) Nation-building and Conflict in Modern
Africa The Suntory Centre
Barnett C (1999) Broadcasting the Rainbow Nation Media Democracy and Nation-
building in South Africa Editorial Board of Antipode 31 (3) 274-303
Benit-Gbaffou C and Mathoho M (2010) A case study of participation in the City
Deep Hostel Redevelopment Project Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Bonner P and Nieftagodien N (2012) Ekurhuleni the making of an urban region
Wits University Press
Campbell H and Marshall R (2002) Values and professional identities in planning
practice in Allmendinger R And Tewdwr-Jones M (eds) Planning futures new
directions for planning theory London Routledge
Castles S and M J (Millerl (2008) The Age of Migration International Population
Movements in the Modern World New York The Guilford Press
Charlton S et al (2014) From Housing to Human Settlement Evolving Perspectives
South African Cities Network
Chipkin I and Meny-Gibert S (2011) Why the Past matters Histories of the Public
Service in South Africa PARI Short Essays number 1 Johannesburg PARI
Collinson M A and K Adazu (2006) The INDEPTH Network A demographic resource
on migration and urbanisation in Africa and Asia Views on Migration in Sub-Saharan
Africa Proceedings of an African Migration Alliance Workshop C Cross D
Gelderblom N Roux and J Mafukidze Cape Town HSRC Press 159- 172
Page | 95
Collinson M A (2006) Health Impacts of Social Transition A study of Female
Temporary Migration and its impact on Child Mortality in Rural South Africa A
dissertation submitted to the School of Public Health University of the Witwatersrand
in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master in Science in the branch of
Medicine
Cornwall A (2002) Making Spaces Changing Places Situating Participation in
Development Institute of Development Studies IDS Working Paper 170
Creswell J W (2009) Research Design Qualitative Quantitative and Mixed Methods
Approaches 3rd Edition Los Angeles Sage Publications Inc
Demacon 2014 Sethokga hostels mixed typology market analysis market research
Findings and recommendations
Department of Human Settlements Republic of South Africa Programmes and
Subsidies document assessed on 7 July 2015 from
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentspublicationshuman_settlement
s_programmes_and_subsidiespdf
Department of Social Development Republic of South Africa White Paper on
Families in South Africa 2012
Dyiki M (2006) City of Cape Town Integrating Families Hostels to Homes
Redevelopment Programme Presentation
httpswwwwesterncapegovzatext200652006_hostels_presentation-_dyikipdf
Fritz V and Menocal A R (2007) Understanding State-Building from a Political
Economy Perspective An Analytical and Conceptual Paper on Processes
Embedded Tensions and Lessons for International Engagement Report for DFIDrsquos
Effective and Fragile States Teams Overseas Development Institute
Greenberg S and Mathoho M (2010) ldquoConceptual Framework on Public
Participation and Developmentrdquo Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Page | 96
Grieger L et al (2013) Moving Out and Moving In Evidence of Short-Term Household
Change in South Africa from the National Income Dynamics Study
Goldblatt B amp Meintjes S (1996) Gender and the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission a submission to the TRC May
Harrison P And Kahn M (2002) The ambiguities of change the case of the planning
profession in the province of KwaZulu-Natal South Africa in Thornley A and Rydin Y
(eds) Planning in the global era Aldershot Ashgate
Jupp E and Inch A (2012) Planning as a profession in uncertain times Town Planning
Review Vol 83 No 5
Khan F and Thurman S (2001) Setting the Stage Current Housing Policy and
Debate in South Africa Isandla Institute
Liefa Consulting (2015) Maps diagrams source
LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor
report
Mapetla M M (2005) Aspects of urban housing for women and men in Southern
Africa Roma Lesotho National University of Lesotho
Marshall M N (1996) Sampling for qualitative research Family Practice Oxford
University Press
Mosoetsa S (2011) Eating from one pot the dynamics of survival in poor South
African households Johannesburg Wits University Press
Mdunyelwa M L (2015) Public Participation in Hostel Redevelopment Programs in
Nyanga and Langa Dissertation presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in
the Faculty of Arts and Social Science at Stellenbosch University
National Housing Report (2009) -
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentsnational_housing_20092_Techn
ical_General_Guidelines
Netshitenzhe J (2011) A Developmental State South Africarsquos developmental
Capacity UCT Summer School Mapungubwe Institute for Strategic Reflection
Page | 97
Peoples Housing Programme httpwwwjoburg-
archivecozacity_visionannualreport2002-03chapter10pdf
Pienaar J S and Cloete C E (2005) Hostel Conversion as Social Housing in South
Africa Funding Regime VS Real Needs Case Study of the Sethokga Hostel Conversion
Project Pacific Rim Real Estate Society (PRRES)
Pienaar J (2010) Community Residential Units key elements application implications
for Metros Municipal Leadership Housing Forum0
Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the Community Residential Units
Programme 2006
httpwwwgovzaabout-governmentgovernment-programmescommunity-
residential-unit-cru-programme
Ramphele M (1993) A Bed Called Home Life in the Migrant Labour Hostels of Cape
Town Ohio Ohio University Press
Segal L (1991) The Human Face of Violence Hostel dwellers speak In The Journal of
Southern African Studies Vol 18 No 1
SJN Development Planning Consultants (2000) Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial
Development Framework
South African Department of Housing 2008 Community Residential Programme
httpwwwhousinggovzaContentCRUHomehtm
South African Local Government Association
httpwwwsalgaorgzaappwebrootassetsfilesGuidelines20for20Municipalities
Flyer20rental20housing20NMApdf
South African Yearbook 20122013
httpwwwsouthafricanewyorknetconsulateYearbook2020131320Human20S
ettlemp
Statistics South Africa Census (2001) Concepts and Definitions Report
httpswwwStatistics+South+Africa+Census+(2001)+Concepts+and+Definitions+Repo
rt+03-02-26+Version
Thurman S (1997) Umzamo improving hostel dwellersrsquo accommodation in South
Africa Environment and Urbanisation Vol 9 No 2
Page | 98
Urban Sector Network Final Report August 2000 ndash April 2003 Hostel Redevelopment
httppdfusaidgovpdf_docsPdaby792pdf
Van der Berg S (2010) Current poverty and income distribution in the context of
South African history Stellenbosch Economic Working Papers 2210
Von Holdt K (2010) Nationalism Bureaucracy and Developmental State The South
African Case South African Review of Sociology Volume 41 Number 1
Watt A (2012) Essentials of project management
httpopentextbccaprojectmanagement
Ziehl S C (2001) Documenting Changing Family Patterns in South Africa Are Census
Data of any Value African Sociological Review 5(2)
Interviews with key informants
Shibambo Vincent Resident Engineer LTE Consulting Interview 14thAugust 2015
(Sethokga family units project site)
Mthethwa Jabu Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Housing Officer Interview 17
August 2015 (Ekurhuleni Kempton Park Housing Offices)
Mohlapamaswi Ward Councillor ANC Tembisa Ward 4 Interview 18 August 2015
(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers
Sololo Lufefe Ward 4 Economic Development Representative Interview 18 August
2015(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers)
Majikijela Sisa Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlements Sethokga
Hostel Conversion Project Manager Interview 19 August 2015 (Sethokga family units
project site boardroom)
Dyiki Malibongwe Housing Development Agency Official 7 September 2015
(Housing Development Agency head office Killarney Johannesburg)
Bako Simba Liefa Architects Interview 9 September (LTE House Sunninghill
Johannesburg)
Page | 12
ANC African National Congress
Cllr Councillor
CRU Community Residential Units
DoHS Department of Human Settlements
EMM Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
GPDHS Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement
HRP Hostel Redevelopment Programme
IDP Integrated Development Plan
IFP Inkatha Freedom Party
MSDF Metropolitan Spatial Development Framework
PWV Pretoria ndash Witwatersrand ndash Vereeniging
RDP Reconstruction and Development Programme
SDF Spatial Development Framework
USAID United States Agency for International Development
USN Urban Sector Network
Page | 13
Chapter one will essentially introduce the research report The aim of this chapter is as
follows highlight the objective of the study provide a background to the study and
also discuss the rationale and problem statement In addition to detailing the
research question the significance of this study and the research methodology will
also be reviewed
Coincidently this research report is written and takes place at a time where there has
been somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms With the prevailing question being ldquoWhat iscontinues to be the
role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo Although this study will not in effect
actively seek to answer that particular question it presents a valuable premise for this
study ldquoFamily units to address the stigma of hostel liferdquo
The main aim of this chapter is to contextualise hostel to position the study within an
expanded theoretical framework The main chapter will in part argue that hostels
have largely remained as urban enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric and
that the rigid structures of regulation and control which were imposed on hostel
dwellers have perpetuated a complex state of affairs The literature review section
which details some of the key concepts theories ideas and arguments on the topic
will elaborate further on this
This chapter aims to provide a comprehensive description of the study area and so it
is in this chapter that the local as well as municipal context of the study area will
altogether be considered The aim of this chapter is to provide the reader with a sort
of lsquofeelrsquo of Sethokga hostel and its present-day circumstance It will attempt to
articulate to the reader the authors own experience and account of the study area
Page | 14
in an effort to provide the reader with a well-versed narrative of the multifaceted
nature of the hostel and the complex reality in which its residents endure
The South African statersquos approach to hostel redevelopment conversion is
discussed It is argued that the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of hostel
redevelopment conversion Chapter four discusses a number of state policy and
approaches addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo Ahead of this however the evolution of the
hostel redevelopment conversion approach is examined which dates back to the
earliest (soon after 1994) efforts by the South African government to remedy the ills of
the hostel system
Chapter five examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seeks to unpack
the conceptualisation of the project This chapter reflects and draws extensively on
the findings of the field work and the invaluable insights offered by the key informants
The main components of the hostel conversion project are examined and the vision
of Sethokga personified by the hostel conversion project is presented in chapter five
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoSo what does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
Page | 15
Introductory chapter
In the wake of the political transition in South Africa in 1994 and for some time
preceding this time frame violence squalor overcrowding and socio-political strife
had long become characteristic of some of the features associated with hostels and
the stigma of hostel life (Thurman 1997) Due to its history as systematically
disempowered yet politically vocal enclaves we have come to know or perhaps be
familiar with hostels as highly contentious and antagonistic environments with a
burdened local identity (Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The stigma of hostel life constitutes among a host of conditions an innate reality
where the residents of hostels inhibit isolated destitute and unbecoming spaces
(Segal 1991) Built as single-sex labour compounds to accommodate African migrant
labourers for the duration of their stay in South Africarsquos white urban areas hostels
occupy a unique position within the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape
(Thurman 1997) As sojourners in South Africarsquos white urban areas the law
constructed a lsquolegalrsquo person called a labourer who was lsquoauthorisedrsquo to temporarily
reside in the urban space but had to retreat to their rural quarters once their lsquoservicersquo
had been concluded (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Thus to draw attention to the
unkindness of their living conditions many hostel dwellers have continued for the
better part of South Africarsquos democracy to lsquochoosersquo physical violence as a tool
perceived to best serve and afford some attention to their troubles (Pienaar and
Crofton 2005)
Within the context of this research report the term hostels widely refer to single-sex
dormitory style labour compounds which emerged in South Africa under the
apartheid system and ideology of separate development (Pienaar and Crofton
2005) The ideology of separate development and the resultant influx control policies
were a distinctive trait of the government of a particular juncture in the countryrsquos
history - a government that as part of its mandate held to discourage the permanent
settlement of the African populace in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) This further
translated itself in the governmentrsquos refusal to plan and consent to any sort of
lsquomeaningfulrsquo investment into areas designated for the other who were primarily
located in the townships on the periphery of the urban terrain (Ramphele 1993)
Page | 16
Badly designed poorly built and suffering many years of neglect hostels were
primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for the comfort of hostel
dwellers (Thurman 1997) Conceivably the hostel system socialised its inhabitants into
an undignified and callous condition which has in some respect persisted and has
unfortunately not wholly been reconciled (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In hostels that
were male occupied hostel dwellers were regarded as lsquomen of four worldsrsquo which
referred to their present and existing life within the hostel the surrounding township(s)
places of work and their rural homes (Segal 1991) The hostel system made it
impossible for hostel dwellers to live in the hostel with their families ie wives
husbands partners children (Segal 1991) This consequence is particularly important
to note at this early stage in the report because of the wisdom and context it adds as
the study progresses
Coincidently this research is written and takes place at a time where there has been
somewhat of a lsquohype of activityrsquo around hostels and much talk on the subject
particularly of late where lsquorefocused measuresrsquo by government in terms of policy
framework(s) to redevelopconvert hostels into family units have dominated several
media platforms Undoubtedly the prevailing question has been ldquoWhat is should be
the role of hostels in contemporary South Africardquo The current Minister of Human
Settlements has said that ldquohostels no longer have a place within South Africarsquos
democratically reconfigured state and so the state needs to get rid of hostelsrdquo (Sisulu
2015) However in a nation such as South Africa efforts towards transition are
ambiguous complex and can often be marked by violence (Mosoetsa 2011)
According to Thurman (1997) of an estimated 604 000 hostel beds around the country
in the late 1990s accommodated whole families relatively close to urban centres
Furthermore Thurman argues that hostels present both a significant challenge and an
opportunity for government NGOs developers and hostel dwellers themselves High
density housing stock stood to gain a considerably large supply of low income
(Thurman 1997) Even while a large number of hostel redevelopmentconversion
projects continue to be riddled with tension and difficulty the prospect(s) for change
and reform that they offer cannot simply be dismissed
This study seeks to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel conversion project to
develop an informed understanding of the defining features and characteristics of
this particular hostel conversion project It examines what is and what has been the
nature of engagement and dialogue between the various stakeholders involved and
discusses the insights they were able to offer to this study In 2015 21 years into South
Page | 17
Africarsquos democracy we have to wonder what is needed to make amends and offset
the dishonour of hostel life
11 Background to the study
We have to understand what the hostel system did was to lsquoaccommodatersquo the
African populace in single-sex labour compounds (Segal 1991) Upon their arrival
their presence in urban areas was constrained as they were met with strict rules and
restrictions (Ramphele 1993) In turn social relations were severally volatile and
ambiguous under the hostel system as hostel dwellers were constrained in their ability
to interact in certain or in their own chosen ways (Thurman 1997) There have been a
number of authors who have noted that the notion of family was partly if not entirely
redefined under this system (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were designed with little or no
thought given of human comfort security and interaction and many are still in
appalling neglected and overcrowded conditions (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) For
many people hostels represent a bitter and hopeless reminder of the past while for
others they are a well prized and affordable shelter in an environment of serve
homelessness (Thurman 1997)
Accordingly soon after 1994 South Africarsquos democratic government made some
attempt to convert hostels into environments suitable for family life although the
extent of this has not entirely been clear (DoHS 2015) This was met with hostility
violence and unwillingness by some hostel dwellers particularly those in the Pretoria
Witwatersrand and Vereeniging (PWV) region to have their hostels
convertedredeveloped into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010) The
violence that had become synonymous with hostel life became an overwhelming
impediment that proved difficult to overcome (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that the idea of an unambiguous constant and unrestricted
presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a point of contention for
some of the men who had far too long become accustomed to living lsquoalonersquo as
men Some expressed unwillingness while others found it a struggle to comprehend or
endorse this change that seemed far too unfamiliar and a challenge to come to
grips with (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Thus in hostels where hostel conversion projects have since taken-off the general
attitudes perceptions and reception of the projects have in some respects continued
to be negative and unwelcomed Scepticism tension and hostility add to the already
complex nature of the hostel conversion projects (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
Page | 18
2010) Hostels are still largely spaces confronted with deep social injustices (ie poor
living conditions a lack of privacy overcrowded) and are an insult to the dignity of
their occupants in several ways as both spatially limited and socio-economically
limiting spaces (Ramphele 1993) The limits imposed by hostels onto hostel dwellers
have persisted in protracting unkindness and a distorted conception of the
fundamental purpose of housing Hostels remain as an unfortunate symbol of a
former governmentrsquos refusal and failure to acknowledge the personhood (the
position and quality of being an individual or having feelings perspectives integrity
and human characteristics needs and wants) of the men and women they housed
(Ramphele 1993)
12 Rationale
Arguably hostel conversion projects and particularly the conceptualisation of these
projects is still a relatively under-researched field Based on my efforts to find
published work on the subject and even though there have been a number of
hostels across the country which have undergone or are undergoing hostel
conversion this remains a rather neglected study field
Hostels within their historic make-up were for the most part premised on fairly uniform
ideals arrangements and gender configurations The demographic setting within
some hostels across the country have since become a lot more fluid and departed
from their former mandatory construct (as strictly single-sex spaces) In what were
predominantly male occupied hostels women and children have since moved into
some of those hostels
Sethokga hostel which will serve as the case study for this research is a hostel that is
still predominantly male occupied but is undergoing hostel conversion to convert the
hostel into family units I believe that the fact that the hostel is still predominantly
male occupied presents an intriguing dimension to this study on hostel conversion
and efforts to grapple with the research question
13 Problem statement
In the case of Sethokga hostel a hostel conversion project is underway but it is not
clear what has sparked such a conversion and to what extent it is driven by the
available policies or assessments of needs or what attempt has been made to meet
these needs Subsequently what would the conversion of a predominantly male
Page | 19
dominated hostel rife with historically inherent conditions necessitate Therefore
how has the conversion project grasped the experience of men within such a hostel
and how has it grasped the concept of family life
14 Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units been conceptualised and
based upon the conceptualised ideas does it address the stigma of hostel life and it
what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What led to the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail What is the broad aim and vision
of the project What is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
15 The significance of the study - positioning the study relative to existing academic
literature
The significance of this research report lies in what I believe is a gap in the scope of
work covered over the years on hostels particularly on hostel conversion projects
Based on my efforts to find published work on the subject questions around what
these projects entail their implications relevance and impact remain unanswered
In the work I have managed to access so far this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects has somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore there needs to be more inquiry and study
conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel conversion
projects
As documented by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) there are vast and intricate
layers of engagement communication participation and even discontentment
Page | 20
involved in hostel conversion projects For instance the legitimacy around where
decision-making lies and which avenues are or should be available to voice
concerns have been some of the challenges relating to hostel conversion and have
added to the already complex nature of these projects
There is most certainly room for a study to examine the conceptualisation of a hostel
conversion project and probe this idea that family units could serve as an adequate
tool for the apt reform of hostels as many of us have come to know them associate
with them or even disassociate from them
16 Aim and objectives of the research
The main aim of this research report is to examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project and how the project has been conceptualised
Objectives
To examine the rationale of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
To develop a more comprehensive understanding of the hostel conversion
approach relative to the socio-economic and political context of the hostel
To explore the possibility and potential of family units as a viable tool to
addressing the stigma of hostel life
To examine how the project has understood the needs and challenges of the
residents and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
To examine the specific spatial focus of the project
17 Research methodology
171 Type of research
The methodology used in the study is a qualitative approach to research and semi-
structured interviews were conducted as the primary means of data collection
Additionally the data collection process involved the use of a variety of sources
which ranged from books journal articles newspaper articles and online media
platforms in the form of articles and radio podcasts
Page | 21
According to Cresswell (2009) this particular method to research (a qualitative
method) entails among other things the use of horizontal dialogue conversation and
the exchange of ideas between the interviewer and the interviewees (Cresswell
2009) Key informants were identified on the basis of their knowledge of andor
involvement in the Sethokga hostel conversion project and the following individuals
were interviewed
1st interviewee Mr Vincent Shibambo resident engineer with LTE consulting (the
company facilitating the construction and administration of the project) Interview
conducted 14th August 2015 at the project site The interview took place in the
boardroom of the project site offices
2nd interviewee Mr Jabu Mthethwa housing officer from the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality Interview conducted 17th August 2015 the interview took place in Mr
Mthethwarsquos office at the council offices in the Kempton Park CBD area
3rd interviewee ANC Ward 4 Tembisa Ward Councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi Interview
conducted 18th August 2015 in the ward councillorrsquos office at the ward councillors
chambers situated adjacent to the project site offices within the vicinity of the hostel
4th interviewee Mr Lufefe Sololo Ward 4 Tembisa Economic Development Rep (Mr
Sololo sits on the ward committee that advises the ward councillor) Interview
conducted 18th of August 2015 at Sethokga hostel
5th interviewee Mr Sisa Majikijela official from the Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlements Mr Majikijela is the current project manager of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project Interview conducted 19th of August 2015 in the boardroom
of the project site offices
6th interviewee Mr Malibongwe Dyiki who was a resident of a hostel in Cape Town in
the early 1980s He then became a community representative in later years and then
moved on to be a government official facilitating hostel redevelopments in the
Western Cape He has written and published on hostels and has also participated in
policy discussions on the Hostel Redevelopment Programme Interview was done on
the 7th of September 2015 at the Housing Development Agencyrsquos head office in
Killarney Johannesburg where he is currently working as the Programme Manager for
the mining towns programme
7th interviewee Simba Bako architect with Liefa Architects (appointed by LTE
consulting Liefa Architects were responsible for the design of the family units)
Page | 22
Interview conducted on the 9th of September 2015 at LTE House in Sunninghill
Johannesburg
172 What kind of information is needed
The kind of information that was needed was information which contextualised the
study area within its broader local and municipal context Pre-existing data
particularly demographic and statistical data on the hostel and its surroundings
Ekurhulenirsquos Integrated Development Plan the Metrorsquos Spatial Development
Framework and information that would give an overview of the geographic social
economic and possibly even the political context of the study area is needed
Moreover project reports studies memorandums or minutes and state policy on
hostel conversion would also be useful
173 Collecting data
In collecting data there were a number of methods and tools that were used which
involved moments of ad hoc discussion and deliberation around the topic What was
invigorating and always thrilling was peoplersquos interest and curiosity regarding this
study The impromptu encounter(s) with people who were open and ready to share
their point of views and experience(s) honestly made the data collection process
that much easier
There was a considerable amount of time spent on examining literature books
articles (both academic and media sources) sources on the internet and journals
Collecting data also involved examining similar programmes and projects on hostel
conversionredevelopment so collecting desktop data and consulting library sources
was an invaluable part of collecting data
174 Sampling
The study sample is important for any research The choice between qualitative
quantitative or even the consideration of using a mixed methods approach should
be determined by the research question and not decided subjectively In grappling
with the research question it seemed most appropriate for the purpose of this study to
make use of a qualitative approach It was believed that a qualitative approach
Page | 23
would provide the necessary framework to respond to the research question and
address the aim and objectives of the study In answering the lsquohowrsquo and lsquowhyrsquo
questions that the study would pose a qualitative approach would engage in a sort
of comprehensive exploration of the many-sided and possibly complex dynamics of
the Sethokga hostel conversion project For this reason a qualitative interview-
centred approach was used (Marshall 1996)
Marshall (1996) argues that there are three broad methods commonly used in
selecting a study sample that is convenience judgement and theoretical sampling
techniques Convenience sampling involves the most accessible person(s) it is the
least time consuming requires the least effort and financing Judgement sampling
also referred to as purposeful sampling is according to Marshall (1996) the most
widely used sampling technique With judgement sampling the researcher
purposefully and actively selects a sample that would best respond to their research
question and in principle convenience is set aside While theoretical sampling
involves a process of selection of a sample that is mainly driven by and rooted in a
theoretical position the sample is selected to examine or elaborate a particular
theory (Marshall 1996)
For the purpose of this study the judgemental sampling technique was used and this
entailed the active and purposeful selection of what Marshall refers to as lsquosubjectsrsquo
with particular expertise ie key informants The sample selection was based on my
prior experience and practical knowledge of the study area The limitation however
was that there were quite a number of elaborate and contentious issues at play
which within the limits of this study could not be explored at length on account of
time constraints and the particular focus of this study
175 Ethical considerations
As a young female scholar entering into a rather conflicted lsquotoughrsquo and culturally-
laden environment I was faced with what was an apparent concern for safety and
so on my trips to the hostel I was always accompanied by my father or a friend
Initially my intention was to interview some of the hostel residents but the sensitivities
around the harshness of their living conditions were highlighted as a possible area of
vulnerability and the spate of xenophobia attacks particularly in and around hostels
suggested reconsideration As a researcher I ensured that the participants were all
Page | 24
well aware and informed that their participation was voluntary and they were at
liberty to withdraw their involvement at any stage The interviewees were informed of
the choice to remain anonymous if they wished and that the information they shared
would be used to develop this research report Thus my ethical obligation as a
researcher was to ensure that I did minimal harm and unintentional damage through
my research that I conducted myself responsibly and professionally at all times and
that I reported accurately what I found including unforeseen and even negative
findings
18 Conclusion
Hostels consolidated the migrant labour system They served not only to control the
number of black labour residing in urban areas but also to manage its behaviour As
hostels were designed to be unattractive and uncomfortable many comparisons
have been made between hostels and institutions such as army barracks and prisons
There is a window of opportunity in promoting hostel conversion but injecting
resources into previously marginalised communities have resulted and is resulting in
conflict local power struggles and competition for those resources (Thurman 1997)
The next chapter will discuss the theoretical backdrop of this study and elaborate on
key concepts theories ideas and arguments that have been of particular relevance
to unpacking the research question
Page | 25
Theoretical backdrop
2 Introduction
It is imperative at this point to contextualise the term hostels so as to clearly il lustrate
what is meant by it This section of the report will contextualise the term hostels and it
will examine key concepts theories ideas and arguments that are of particular
relevance to the study
Furthermore chapter two argues that hostels have largely remained as urban
enclaves typically remote from the urban fabric (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
It argues that the rigid structures of regulation and control that were imposed upon
the former inhabitants of hostels were essentially just one part of a multi-faceted and
disconcerting circumstance that has continued to live on within a large number of
hostels (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012) This view that hostels operated and in some
respect continue to operate under a complex set of circumstances is shared and
supported by the work of authors such as Segal (1991) Ramphele (1993) Goldblatt
and Meintjes(1996) Thurman (1997) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) Dyiki (2006) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) Subsequently some of their work will be used to
unpack the research question and draw on certain aspects that resonate with the
case study The following abridged abstract describes some of the complexities
around hostels and the views captured in the work of some of the authors mentioned
above
According to Segal (1991) hostel life and the regulations imposed upon hostel
dwellers made it extremely difficult to maintain family life that is men would leave
their families in the rural areas for long periods of time to find work in the city
Ramphele (1993) notes that the families of the men would then became reliant for
their survival upon the remittance of the men Mapetla (2005) makes a compelling
argument that suggests that within contemporary society men are traditionally
culturally and even spiritually still regarded as the head the protector and provider of
their families even as the lines delineating the roles of men and women within
contemporary society have become faint and more fluid Arguably hostels still exist
within a highly complex setting (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Page | 26
21 Contextualising hostels
Generally hostels were badly designed poorly built and many have been suffering
years of neglect (Thurman 1997) Hostels were primarily built to accommodate
African migrant workers for the containment of their labour over the duration of their
stay in what were demarcated as South Africarsquos white urban areas (Thurman 1997)
There are notably three types of hostels namely public sector private sector and
grey sector hostels (Ramphele 1993)
Public sector hostels are hostels that were built and managed by provincial or local
authorities and mainly accommodated workers across a range of sectors (Ramphele
1993) Private sector hostels were built by private sector enterprise to house private
sector labourers who would mainly be working in the factories and mines (Pienaar
and Crofton 2005) Grey sector hostels were built on public sector-owned land by the
private sector under some form of contractual agreement with a government
authority (provincial or local) but were largely managed and controlled by private
sector employers (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Public and grey sector hostels were
generally situated in the townships (Thurman 1997) However when they were
planned these hostels were generally located on the outskirts of the cities but with
increased urban growth they now relatively tend to be more centrally situated
(Thurman 1997)
Ramphele (1993) argued that each hostel had a distinct form and quality about it
Elements of tribalism certain customs systems of belief and association dimensions of
conflict and conflict resolution were not homogeneous across all hostels (Ramphele
1993) The type of work that the migrant labourers did across the sectors they worked
was often rudimentary It ranged from unskilled to very basic semi-skilled work and it
was quite labour intensive in return for meagre earnings (Ramphele 1993)
Historically hostels were characterised by two main geographic classifications firstly
hostels in the backdrop of an urban context (ie also referring to inner city hostels)
and secondly hostels in the areas around mines (Segal 1991) According to Segal
(1991) urban context hostels had a more diffused grouping of hostel dwellers than
their mining counterparts (Segal 1991) Hostels in urban context developed broader
and somewhat complex relations with the outside community This contrasted with
the extreme isolation of hostel dwellers in hostels around the mines Therefore hostels
in the urban context were to a lesser extent conceived to be lsquomore openrsquo and lsquoless
strictly controlledrsquo However both were essentially sites of control and exploitation
Page | 27
with clearly marked physical boundaries in form of high walls and fences with single
and restricted entry and exit points (Segal 1991)
Hostels in urban areas had government bureaucracies responsible for their
management and maintenance as opposed to a single employercompany (Segal
1991) Moreover hostels in the urban context accommodated a wider and more
diverse range of workers who did not necessarily work for the same
employercompany or have uniform working hours or shifts In urban hostels ethnicity
was not the official organiser of hostel dwellers as men from different backgrounds
and homelands would and could share rooms (Ramphele 1993) Lastly and perhaps
the most important distinguishing feature of the two was the fact that hostels in urban
areas were not under the extensive force of lsquototal controlrsquo as was the experience of
mining hostel dwellers (Segal 1991 Ramphele 1993 Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
According to Pienaar and Crofton (2005) public sector hostels accommodated the
largest number of hostel dwellers Overall the quality of living environment of hostels
was generally poor but this was particularly bad in public sector hostels (Ramphele
1993) Additionally the administrative processes and management of public sector
hostels was under dire strain as no clear records of those that lived in the hostels or
those entering and exiting the hostel were kept (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
Ramphele (1993) notes that although private sector hostels were considered to be
better managed and maintained The general state of all hostels whether public or
privately owned was largely characterised by poor living conditions a lack of
privacy the sharing of very limited spaces a distressed local context and
overcrowded conditions (Ramphele 1993) Pienaar and Crofton (2005) further note
that around the early 1980s hostel residents simply started to withdraw from payment
of rentals and thus the maintenance of the hostels grew even thinner and steadily
non-existent Public sector hostels grew especially financially and politically
unmanageable (Pienaar and Crofton 2005)
22 Key concepts theories ideas and arguments
To unpack the research question and contextualise the study within a broader
theoretical framework this section of the report will discuss and draw on a number of
concepts theories ideas and arguments
Page | 28
221 The historic model of hostels the conceptualisation of the hostel system
In grappling with the historic model of the hostel system this section of the report will
discuss two main themes The conceptualisation of the hostel system and migration
migrant labour as conceived under the hostel system It illustrates the effect hostels
have had on shaping the lives and experiences of their inhabitants in unique and
complex ways (Thurman 1997)
South Africa is a country marked by a legacy of systematic discrimination and the
deliberate disempowerment of a lsquocategoryrsquo of its population (Thurman 1997) Hostels
were established supported and perpetuated by methodical policy frameworks and
brute controls to discourage the permanent settlement of the in historically lsquowhite
areasrsquo (Segal 1991) Thurman (1997) argues that hostels occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are symbolic of three centuries of
systematic racial discrimination
Seemingly ignited by and originating in the mining industry in the nineteenth century
the construction of hostels reached a peak during the 1960s and 1970s in the period
that has been referred to as the ldquogrand apartheidrdquo years (Thurman 1997) They were
built as single-sex dormitory compounds to accommodate African migrant labourers
as sojourners in what were delineated as white urban areas (Ramphele 1993) In
hostels which were intended strictly for male migrant labourersrsquo job-seeking by
African women was criminalised and a deliberate policy not to provide family
housing was pursued (Ramphele 1993)
Common to hostels was the blurring and hostility of the boundaries between the
hostel dwellers place(s) of work and their living spaces (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) In
turn some authors have argued that hostels in some sense functioned as a lsquototal
institutionrsquo According to Segal (1991) and Ramphele (1993) geographically many
hostels were isolated and situated literally at the edges of urban areas and society in
general They were primarily designed for the containment of labour and not for
human comfort safety or enrichment (Thurman 1997) The heavy-handedness of the
hostel system imposed a cunning inferiority complex a sense of no escape yet quite
interestingly a later unwillingness and indifference to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have
their hostel converted into family units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
Ramphele (1993) and Segal (1991) make a rather compelling argument and share
the view that the behaviour and conduct of some of the hostel dwellers against
Page | 29
having their hostel converted into family units is indicative of similar behaviour and
actions displayed by long-term prisoners and people contained in barracks They
argue that a substantial number of long-term inmates would in some instances
display great unwillingness and some difficulty to the prospect of re-entering society
after being socialised into a total institution a reformatory (Ramphele 1993 and
Segal 1991) According to a text by Statistics South Africa (2001) an institution can be
defined as a communal place of residence for persons with common characteristics
(Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001) One could then argue
that one of the common characteristics shared by many hostels was the migrant
labourer status attributed to them (Dyiki 2006)
222 Migration and the notion of migrant labour labourers as conceived under the hostel
system
Castles and Miller (2008) argues that all through time and space individuals and
families have been migrating and doing so for a number of reasons Universally the
migration lsquophenomenonrsquo was and has been as a result of varying factors and in
response to certain causes and events such as demographic growth environmental
changes development vs underdevelopment and the seeking of lsquobetterrsquo
opportunities (Castles and Miller 2008) Others have turned to migration to seek jobs
often located or perceived to be concentrated in larger urban centres (Collinson
and Adazu 2006 Castles and Miller 2008)
Migration can occur as a voluntary or forced process This study is particularly
interested in the event of migration that becomes forced migration when the
circumstances of individuals and families leave them little or no choice but to pursue
lsquohopersquo away from their native home-base (Castles and Miller 2008) Arguably this was
characteristic of the hostel model Hostels enabled mines and later other industries to
suppose and cause that hostel dwellers had homes in rural areas (Collinson 2006)
Seemingly the rural populace was the lsquodesiredrsquo workforce ushered into the city and
mines and exploited as labourers for the development of the urban-based economy
(Thurman 1997)
According to Thurman (1997) the residents of hostels were typically considered as
rural traditionalists and lsquodangerousrsquo outsiders by the residents of townships which
surrounded the hostel Their physical as well as social isolation meant that they often
retained strong links with their rural home-base (Segal 1991) This involved the
Page | 30
periodic movement of individual household members between the hostel and their
rural homes (Thurman 1997) The ruralurban linkages which were subsequently
fashioned became a distinguishing feature of not just hostel dwellers but the black
African populace and as a part of their experience of urban life (Collinson and
Adazu 2006) The costly urban world was thus considered by many as merely a place
of work (Segal 1991 and Ramphele 1993)
This type of migration - also often referred to as lsquocircularrsquo or lsquooscillatingrsquo migration -
became characteristic of a sort of temporary sentiment to life and living in the city
(Dyiki 2006) Additionally the events of circular migration presented certain
household dynamics and challenges in maintaining the often faint links between the
migrant and the households family left behind (Collionson 2006 Ramphele 1993)
Conceivably hostel dwellers have for a long time had a common rural orientation
(Segal 1991) ldquoIt has been repeatedly demonstrated that migrants do not leave
behind the countryside in their journey to the cityrdquo and this rural consciousness has
remained central to the migrant labour population (Segal 1991 9)
Within contemporary society the concept of lsquothe new economies of labour
migrationrsquo has emerged as an alternative position and argues that migration can be
and has become a household strategy (Collinson and Adazu 2006) According to
Collinson and Adazu (2006) within their analysis of contemporary migration patterns
migration has now largely become something that is purposefully chosen by
members of a household family This phenomenon involves the temporary migration
of some individuals within the household family in pursuit of opportunities towards
the collective betterment of the family household or even their broader community
(Collinson and Adazu 2006) Under this model of migration family and community
networks are considered to play an important and supporting role in facilitating
migration between urban-based and village-based households families (Collinson
and Adazu 2006) What is then required of the migrant is thatheshe reciprocate the
initial support offered by hisher household family community as received in hisher
rural-base (Collinson and Adazu 2006)
While in some respect migration is becoming a lsquolonged-forrsquo process and somewhat of
a deliberate choice on the other hand adverse circumstances force families
households to partake in this process as a means of survival (Collinson and Adazu
2006) The ability of migrants to maintain both an urban and rural residence in
whatever context ie historic or contemporary continues to present a social
geographic and economically complex state of affairs (Pienaar and Crofton (2005)
Page | 31
223 The notion of bedhold
The context of hostels designed to be uncomfortable and uninviting the closest
likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo was in the form of a bed Every aspect of life and
survival in hostels revolved around a bed (Ramphele 1993) According to Ramphele
(1993) this in turn perpetuated a circumstance of lsquoclientelismrsquo and blurred the lines of
patronage when it came to the exchanging of the membership of beds and when
beds were to be allocated or reallocated (Ramphele 1993) The ill-defined and fluid
relationship of patronage between bed-holders would in some respect function like
and resemble households (Ramphele 1993 Segal 1991 Mosoetsa 2011)
In some sense bed-holders assumed an intermediary role and served an informal
function as lsquolandlordsrsquo thus as proprietors of the bedhold (Ramphele 1993) Hostel
dwellers became lsquobed-holdersrsquo rather than lsquohouse-holdersrsquo in the urban space
(Segal 1991) It became unduly problematic that the bed was the only space over
which they could have any measure of control It after all distorted the perceptions
hostel dwellers developed of themselves in relation to their environment constraining
them to varying degrees (Ramphele 1993) Ramphele (1993) argues that the limits set
by physical space in hostels also defined in very clear terms the inside versus the
outside security versus insecurity family versus non-family and urban versus rural She
further argues that onersquos very identify in the hostel and their lsquolegal existencersquo in the
urban space depended on their attachment to a bed (Ramphele 1993) According
to Ramphele (1993) the bed acted as a sort of mediator thus lsquoa go-betweenrsquo the
hostel dwellers and the rest of society to which they remain somewhat disconnected
and possibly indifferent (Ramphele 1993)
224 The stigma of hostel life
The stigma of hostel life gave a rather conspicuous meaning to lsquoblack urban lifersquo and
their experience(s) of life in urban areas (Ramphele 1993) Hostels were badly
designed poorly built and many suffer years of neglect (Thurman 1997) There have
been a number of authors who have argued that hostel dwellers suffered a great
injustice to their humanity their perception of self constrained relations with others
and a constant struggle to maintain family networks with their often rural-base
(Goldblatt and Mentjies 1996)
Page | 32
The living conditions in hostels have been expressed in basic terms as shocking
disgusting inhumane cruel and intolerable by both scholars and residents of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Hostel accommodation is undesirable both aesthetically and
conceptually and there are a number of common features which characterise most
hostels a lack of privacy overcrowded and poor living conditions very limited space
and a serious state of disrepair (Ramphele 1993) Failing to delineate private
personal space the purpose of hostels was to ensure a compliant labour force (Segal
1991)
According to Ramphele (1993) hostels represent physical space that is not only
limited but is also limiting Ramphele makes a distinction between the circumstance
and living arrangements of hostel dwellers and township residents Arguing that
although physical overcrowding of sleeping accommodation between the two
(hostel dwellers and township residents) many not be much different in terms of the
ratio of people to roomsbeds (Ramphele 1993) For township residents it is most likely
that they would be sharing these limited facilities with kin or friends rather than
complete strangers (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of hostels some men
women may adapt too well to living in single-sex hostels and would find change too
difficult to cope with (Ramphele 1993)
225 Family versus household configurations
The terms family and household are not necessarily synonymous According to the
Department of Social Development (2012) ldquoa household comprises of either (i) a
single person who makes provision(s) for hisher food or other essentials for living or (ii)
a group of at least two or more people living together who make common provision
for their food and other essentialsrdquo (White Paper on Families in South Africa 2012 11)
Moreover the Department notes that a household can contain a family yet the
members of the household are not always necessarily a family further remarking that
ldquoa household performs the functions of providing a place of dwelling and the sharing
of resources and these functions can be performed among people who are related
by blood or people without any such relationshiprdquo (White Paper on Families in South
Africa 2012 11) This distinction of family and household configurations is useful to this
study for two main reasons (a) as it has been suggested that one of the broad aims of
the hostel conversion approach is to introduce facilitate lsquofamily lifersquo and to inject a
family quality into these historically single-sex environments (b) Is it then supposed by
the Sethokga hostel conversion project that the household configurations in the
hostel are at present existing wholly in the absence of family configurations
Page | 33
It is important to be mindful of the fact that with time households have become
more complex and family structures more diffused (Mosoetsa 2011) Hostel dwellers
through years of living under space constraints and in single-sex accommodation
have developed certain ideologies practices and habits (Thurman 1997) Arguably
the hostel system redefined and reshaped family and household configurations and
constructed a complex social setting (Ramphele 1993) Within the context of male
occupied hostels relationships among men are characterised by hierarchy and
Ramphele (1993) notes that this is legitimised by lsquotraditionrsquo and is based on age
differences The older men are more likely to occupy positions of authority and be
regarded as the lsquoheadsrsquo of the household and in authority to organise the affairs of
the household Whereas the younger men would be cast in the role of attending to
duties considered lsquotypicalrsquo to women and that is the upkeep of the household ie
cleaning cooking In this lsquomanrsquos worldrsquo tradition and age regulate the day-to-day
function of the household (Ramphele 1993) The links between the men and the
families they had have left behind has arguably become increasingly scant and
incoherent (Grieger et al 2013) With the blurring of their lsquobindingrsquo reciprocal
obligations and support the conception of family life was redefined and put under
considerable strain as a result of migrant labour laws and the criminalisation of job-
seeking activity in urban areas of their rural wives partners (Segal 1991)
In both family and household configurations shared obligations and mutual support
takes many forms (Mapetla 2005) The family structure is perceived to be the
lsquocommander and regulator of the activities and conduct of the individual members
The family structure has been set apart from a household in that a household is more
of a residential unit where related andor none-related individuals in a sense lsquoeat
from the same potrsquo (Mosoetsa 2011) In some cases the individuals and members of
a household provide themselves jointly with food andor other essentials however a
household can also consist of a person who lives alone The distinguishing feature is
that a family configuration consists of people individuals who have a blood-kin
connection and this can include immediate and extended relatives but the same
does not necessarily always hold true for household configurations (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005 Statistics South Africa Census Concepts and Definitions 2001)
226 Gender relations considering the aspect of men and housing
South Africa can still somewhat be regarded as a traditionally patrilineal society
where land and property are traced through the male lineage where upon marriage
Page | 34
a woman is required to leave her native home to reside with her husband at his home
(Mapetla 2005) This system has been more inclined to empower men (Ziehl 2001)
Subsequently within contemporary society and within the lsquonew politics of gender
relationsrsquo property and land ownership have since become a highly contentious
subject Therefore the issue of housing is quite a significant one and warrants some
reflection particularly the aspect of men and housing (Mapetla 2005)
Gender roles have steadily been changing and are increasingly becoming ill-defined
(Ziehl 2001) So how can or rather how should housing projects and interventions
such as hostel conversion projects be more gender sensitive inclusive representative
and reflective of the changing gender roles both in a social and spatial sense
Gender considerations regarding housing and housing projects need to be mindful of
the innate differentiation between men and women and their not always uniform
needs and interaction(s) with space (Mapetla 2005) The often male bias when it
comes to access to housing might just further be perpetuated through hostel
conversion projects The question here is then does this new conception of a
reconfigured living environment in the form of family units make provision(s) towards
addressing any of the housing-related gender biases What do these projects
consider important in terms of gender issues if at all how have these issues been
factored into the projects
Gender and housing related theory has often argued strongest the case of women in
their inability to access housing land the law and related funding (Ziehl 2001) The
issues of gender relations and access to housing have become increasingly topical
(Mosoetsa 2011) Womenrsquos rights access to the law resources and social amenities
have been areas which have gained a significant amount of traction in both policy
and academic circles owing to historically discriminatory laws (Mosoetsa 2011
Mapetla 2005) However in South Africa and perhaps this is true for many other
societies traditionally culturally and even spiritually men are still to a significant extent
regarded as the head of household the foremost provider for their families (Mapetla
2005)
Within the context of hostels migrant labour laws which also made it a point that the
remuneration of its African labour workforce was as horrendous as the conditions they
lived in shaped a particular aspect of menrsquos relation to housing in the urban context
and their experiences (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) In a study conducted by Segal
(1991) a group of men living in a hostel were interviewed to give their account of life
in the hostel According to Segal (1991) it became apparent that the men tolerated
the hostel because they felt humiliated by even the thought of losing their roles as the
Page | 35
provider for their family Some men suggested that they could and would not bring
their wives or children to the hostel for even a brief visit (Segal 1991) In their minds
they were better off alone in the citymine because the burden of their own survival
was already enormous (Segal 1991)
227 State formation nation building and bureaucracy
Large sections of the South African state have continued to be institutionally
ineffective unsustainable and dysfunctional (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert 2011) Post-
1994 efforts towards nation-building and state formation in the country have taken
many forms a unitary state the inauguration of a new president of the Republic of
South Africa and the promulgation of the 1996 Constitution of the Republic(Barnet
1999) Furthermore the ideals of nation building and state formation would attempt
to diffuse into a sound and convergent form what was once opposite and adverse
(von Holdt 2010)
The housing deficit in the country was and has continued to be one of the greatest
challenges facing the government particularly the inadequate provision and access
to housing for the black majority who had been rendered destitute and occupying
dreadful accommodation (Thurman 1997) In what could better be regarded as
temporary disaster relief areas than housing suitable for any human to call lsquohomersquo
(Ramphele 1993) Post-apartheid bureaucratic inefficiency class formation
redundant budgetary rituals antagonistic attitudes towards public service vocation
and authority has greatly stifled service delivery imperatives ie social housing
provision (von Holdt 2010) Undoubtedly the role of policy towards addressing issues
such as housing and service delivery is a significant one (Chipkin and Meny-Gibert
2011) this will be discussed further in chapter four
228 The role and significance of community public participation in hostel conversion to
family unitrsquos projects
Public participation in any context is a complex and at times a contentious exercise
Academic literature on community public participation tends to presuppose an
experience or existence of informal unambiguous or authentic relations in
community participation processes (Mdunyelwa 2015) This particularly in housing
related projects and programmes with the assumption that if all the stakeholders
involved are consulted the process of participation is likely to yield positive results and
success (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) In South Africa the notion of public
Page | 36
community participation has gained popularity as a democratic practice essential
for development and nation-building (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
The work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their research project entitled ldquoA
Case Study of participation in the City Deep Hostel Redevelopmentrdquo suggests that
there are more complex and less diffused forces at play According to Benit-Gbaffou
and Mathoho (2010) the central question often becomes when and at what point
can one say people have effectively or meaningfully participated This question is
especially relevant and significance to hostel conversion projects and to efforts to re-
configure hostels as lsquofamily units suitable for family lifersquo (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010) According to state policy the hostel conversion redevelopment approach is
and has been a nation-wide intervention initiated by the post-1994 government to
redevelop convert hostels in efforts to de-stigmatise these historically-laden spaces
(Dyiki 2006) Moreover the current Minister of Human Settlement has of late stated
on a number of media platforms the hostel conversion approach also seeks to
rehabilitate these historically single-sex migrant labour compounds into family
apartmentsunits to promote a family-oriented setting (Sisulu 2015) According to a
2001 text by Statistics South Africa ldquoconverted or upgraded hostels should be treated
in the same way as a block of flats and each unit considered as a separate housing
unitrdquo (Statistics South Africa Census2001 3)
The importance and usefulness of public community participation in hostel
conversion projects have been a widely and overly debated topic However this
does not wholly take away from the fact that there are many and varied obstacles
and challenges when it comes to the actual practice and experience of
participation on the ground (Greenberg and Mathoho 2010) Even while the political
and socio-economic contexts of every project are varied with different structures and
the coordination of stakeholders take on different forms (Mdunyelwa 2015) Benit-
Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) argue that participation has often become a political
process riddled in processes of negotiation and rampant differences of opinion
coupled with a mix of personal andor political ambitions (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010)
Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in their study of the City Deep Hostel
Redevelopment Project outlined a number of issues which the project encountered
before during and after the hotel redevelopment project there included
Page | 37
Before the redevelopment process
Managing change while also trying to mitigate violence the unauthorised
occupation of tenants wanting to gain the benefits of the redevelopment project
and the allocation of units (as a contentious challenge) were cited as challenges
encountered before the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
During the process
Challenges around the design of the units (limitations and constraints with respect to
skills time and finances) the issue of labour the provision of public and social
facilities services (ie cregraveches play areas for the children) were cited as being
encountered during the hostel redevelopment process (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho
2010)
Issues after the project
Tariff rates (with electricity as one of the biggest concerns) along with the
disagreement and discontentment around rental payments were cited as the
challenges which were encountered post the hostel redevelopment process A
central question and concern that arose focused on whether the hostel did not just
became a renovated workersrsquo hostel or if it actually did change into actual family
units (Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho 2010)
With the study area for this research in mind I am left wondering if the issues identified
by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) are unique to the City Deep contextproject
or are they to some extent representative and reverberate to the broader
challenges and limitations of hostel conversion projects across the country Certainly
there is some value to participation when it comes to hostel conversion
redevelopment but the process of participation particularly within the context of
hostels as politically and socio-economically volatile environments will most likely be
confronted by sturdy issues of inherent sensitivities and nuances (Benit-Gbaffou and
Mathoho 2010) This is what Mdunyelwa (2015) decisively refers to as binary cultural
political and social structures alluding to the sentiment that some hostel dwellers are
in some respect men and women of two minds set free from the physical shackles of
oppression yet still sadly unable and ill-equipped to live and transform their thinking
well beyond that (Mdunyelwa 2015)
Page | 38
23 Conclusion
Typically the body of work that exists on hostels is unambiguously and largely
concentrated on the historically-laden context of hostels It especially articulates
issues of violent conflict and tension within hostels and their surrounding areas
Conflict situations are often captioned as hostel versus township lsquowarsrsquo There is an
important political backdrop to this which relates to the rural urban links made
mention of in this chapter
Furthermore the poor living conditions of hostels the inadequate provision of services
and social amenities should be considered The loss of family life and the sense that
hostels pose as limited spaces which is a negative reflection on to dignity of its
inhabitants are some of elements associated with the stigma of hostel life (Bonner
and Nieftagodien 2012 Ramphele 1993) This has to quite a significant extent
remained a present-day and associated reality of the hostel setting and has posed
vast challenges to hostel conversion redevelopment projects
This chapter has argued that the landscape of hostels has by and large remained
complex at times perplexing and highly contentious As a resultant the wicked
consequences of the hostel system have been many and varied but all of which
warrant due attention The theoretical backdrop on hostels has been useful in
developing themes that resonate with the case study Sethokga hostel Of particular
relevance to the case study will be role and significance of community public
participation in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Highlighting some of the
issues encountered before and during the project as the project has not yet been
completed Certain aspects of the discussion on key concepts theories arguments
and ideas and how they resonate with the case study will be explored further
Particularly the notion of bedhold the aspect of men and housing the stigma of
hostel life and the resultant consequences of the hostel system will be critically
discussed in chapter five which examines the Sethokga hostel conversion project
Page | 39
Introducing Sethokga hostel
3 Introduction
In addition to the study area this chapter will in greater detail describe and locate
Sethokga hostel It examines its local as well as municipal context and presents a
visual narrative of the hostel The aim of the visual narrative is to provide the reader
with a lsquosensersquo of the physical setting of the hostel thus to provide the reader with a
visual depiction of the multifaceted circumstance of the hostel and the complex
challenges in which its residents endure Chapter three largely seeks to provide the
reader with an impression of the context in which the Sethokga hostel conversion
project is taking place
31 Sethokga hostel (synopsis of the status quo)
In the period between 1890 and the late 1920s Ekurhuleni (at the time referred to as
the East Rand region of the Transvaal Province) experienced increased numbers of
black male workersmigrants This was as a result of a surge in the gold mining sector
which took place on the Witwatersrand gold reefs (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
According to Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) of the 15 000 workers that were
employed in the sector some 5 000 worked in what is now called the Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality With time the number of workers in the Ekurhuleni area
continued to rise considerably most of who were oscillating migrants who were either
accommodated in labour compounds such as hostels or shanty settlements in
townships across Ekurhuleni such as Tembisa Duduza Tsakane Kwa-Thema and so
forth (Bonner and Nieftagodien 2012)
Bonner and Nieftagodien (2012) also argue that for most of the period of the
booming mining sector in the Witwatersrand reef to well into the countryrsquos
democratic dispensation political contention in hostels had long been a common
feature throughout the region As a consequence hostels and a number of the
townships in Ekurhuleni have somewhat continued to exist within a circumstance of
deep-seated antagonistic political and socio-economic conditions (Bonner and
Nieftagodien 2012)
Sethokga hostel is one of the largest hostels in the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan region
according to the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis Study in 2014 there
Page | 40
were approximately 12 120 residents living in the hostel (Demacon 2014) Of that
roughly 4 000 have since the beginning of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
been relocated or reallocated within other blocks in the hostel to make way for the
construction of the family units (Demacon 2014) Some of the relocations of residents
have been to alternative sites outside the hostel to either Enhlanzeni hostel or
Vusimuzi hostel both situated in the Tembisa area (Demacon 2014)Interestingly
Enhlanzeni as well as Vusimizi hostels are also experiencing issues of overcrowding
poor living conditions and similar socio-economic conditions to Sethokga Moreover
neither Enhlanzeni nor Vusimuzi hostel have or are undergoing upgrading
conversion It was not clear in the Sethokga Hostel Mixed Typology Market Analysis
Study what the reasons for relocating the residents of Sethokga to these hostels were
Map 1 Map depicting the relocation sites of the Sethokga residents to Enhlanzeni hostel and
Vusimuzi hostel
Source Demacon 2014
Page | 41
311 Geographic description of the study
Sethokga hostel was built in 1980 and much like other hostels across the country the
Sethokga hostel was badly designed poorly built and has been suffering years of
neglect Sethokga hostel is a public sector type hostel and is owned by the
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Sethokga was built to accommodate male
migrant labourers from a range of industries (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) Similar to
numerous other hostels men could live in the hostel so long as they had work in
industries but wives partners and families were prohibited from residence (Thurman
1997) They were entitled only to short-term visiting permits Regular and violent raids
which were carried out by authorities during the day and at night would rigorously
enforce these regulations to chase away arrest or bus back the wives partners and
families of the men back to the homelands (Thurman 1997)
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi initially the hostel
accommodated a lsquomixturersquo of residents black men across all tribes and ethnicities
but he recalls the change that occurred in the 1990s in response to political shifts He
recalls that ldquoafter the release of Mandela and when they started preaching lsquothis
thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions happened according to who was Zulu or
Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Below the ward
councillor explains what he saw as some of the factors that led to what is currently
the strong predominance of Pedi and Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel
suggesting that ldquoThere were mixed feeling when talks were rife concerning
negotiations that could lead to possible elections because the IFP (Inkatha Freedom
Party) was rejecting such a notion At the time it was a situation of the Zulursquos terrorizing
the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa and standing with the white man The
Zulursquos did not like such an idea which caused a divide among the Zulu and Xhosa
This led to conflict between the Xhosa and the Zulu There was fighting everywhere in
the country and you found some Pedis Venda and Tsongarsquos ran away from certain
hostels because they were being chased out and some landed up in Sethokga (
Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) The points made by Cllr Mohlapamaswi flag some
interesting points for instance that this hostel in some respect played the role of a
place of refuge and might affect how residents view it
Sethokga hostel is situated on approximately 22 hectares of land and consists of 29 U-
shaped single and two storey dormitories but mainly consists of the two storey walk-up
dormitories (Demacon 2014) The hostel lies on medium dolomitic soil despite this it
has been said and reported that over the years this has not had a significant impact
Page | 42
on much of the structural qualities of the hostel (Pienaar and Crofton 2005) The
structural sturdiness of the hostel is said to have been mitigated through precautions
such as drainage and the assembly of lsquowellrsquo positioned pavements (Demacon 2014)
According to the ward councillor there are a few women and children living in the
hostel although it is not quite clear how many They are however not recognised as
lsquolegitimatersquo residence of Sethokga (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Arguably a
number of the hostel redevelopment conversion projects that have taken place
across the country have been as a response to the prevailing presence of women
and children who had come to live in the hostel The fact that this hostel has
remained predominantly male occupied presents a number contextual dimensions
to the hostel conversion project This will be explored in chapter five which will
examine the conceptualisation of the hostel conversion project
According to Thurman (1997) it is not uncommon in hostels for up to three families to
live in one room measuring 20 square metres Such rooms were designed to
accommodate two to three workers or even up to twenty people to share a sink a
shower and toilet (Thurman 1997) Yet lsquowholersquo families ie husbands wives children
or extended families have not moved into Sethokga Overcrowding remains a
concern and privacy is scarce in the hostel (Demacon 2014) The dormitories have
very limited physical space and little room for manoeuvre The typical floor plan of a
hostel is provided on the next page and depicts the rigid rudimentary and restrained
design of the hostel compound Sethokga hostel has identical floor plans and
elevations
Page | 43
Floor plan of a typical dormitory compound
Source Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
Figure 1 Ground Floor Plan
Figure 2 First Floor Plan
Figure 3 Elevation
Page | 44
312 Locality
The hostel is situated in the East Rand region of the Gauteng province within the
municipal administrative jurisdiction of the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (EMM)
in the Kempton Park ndash Tembisa Customer Care Area It is located in the north-eastern
region region B of the EMM in the township of Tembisa and lies to the south of the
Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and to the east of the City of Johannesburg
Moreover the hostel is lies between the Kempton Park Pretoria railway link near
Oakmoor station thus a multipurpose and inter-as well as intra-regional public
transport node It is well serviced in terms of public transport and easily accessible
from the R21 (Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
Map 2 Locality map
Source Google maps 2015
Source EkurhuleniGIS 2015
Page | 45
Map 3 The Sethokga hostel complex
313 Local and municipal context
Tembisa is one of the largest townships in the metro and it is situated in region A of the
EMM towards the north-western end of the municipality The hostel lies in ward four of
the metro to the east of Midrand and to the west of one of the most affluent suburbs
in region A Glen Marais along with other high income areas such as Serengeti Golf
Estate Midstream and the suburb of Edenvale (Demacon 2014)
The Integrated Development Plan (IDP) for the Oakmoor area Area 19 of the metrorsquos
Local Integrated Development Plan (LIDP) was last prepared in 2000 The report
contained among its leading aims to establish an integrated framework to guide and
facilitate development interventions in the area (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000) It was documented in the report that the SDP would guide the
Page | 46
municipalityrsquos decisions in the development and management of the area in a way
that the report articulates as follows by encouraging and setting the framework for
private sector investment and initiatives and by seeking to strengthen economic
activity in the area through the identification of specific projects and programmes
which would kick-start development and lastly working towards improving service
delivery (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) The report reviews the
historically context of the area and argues that basically no provision was made for
service delivery or the adequate management of land and no consideration of land
use imperatives was given This was the case throughout the Tembisa Township (SJN
Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Furthermore the report established that the general land-use pattern across most of
the township was mainly comprised of residential developments It was in this 2000
Integrated Development Plan that it was overtly and in retrospect alluded to that
Tembisa had been established to function at that time as a dormitory settlement for
the neighbouring economic centres of the East Rand region such as Kempton Park
Olifantsfontein and Midrand (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
An abstract in 2000 SDF report(SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000 stated
the following that investigations had confirmed that the Sethokga hostel buildings
were structurally sound except for some weather proofing of external walls and basic
finishes to walls floors and ceiling Some repair work to cracks and precautions to pre-
empt future cracking may be necessary but the hostel blocks would offer little
difficulty in terms of conversion into single and family units According to the report
there seemed to be more problems with engineering services For example the
internal sewer reticulation was said to be so dilapidated that it may have needed to
be replaced entirely Parts of the water supply network would need to be replaced
fire hydrants installed electricity supply upgraded and grading of roads and storm-
water disposal required substantial attention (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
When the completed report was presented in 2000 it set out a case that the
municipality was currently negotiating with a non-profit organisation to acquire hostel
land and convert the hostel buildings into single and family units and manage such
housing stock (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000) It further documented
that the lsquoultimatersquo number of dwelling units would be about 1200 with the first phase
of development to deliver 500 units The report suggested that the development
would be undertaken by an external organisation and that few planning guidelines
Page | 47
would need to be proposed to harmonize Sethokga hostel residential complex with
the rest of the Tembisa Township In the report it is assumed that the hostel conversion
would should result in a lsquosecurity complexrsquo type of housing development and
access to the complex would be gained mainly from local distributors such as the
extension of MbizaIzimbongi Street and Nyarhi Street (SJN Development Planning
Consultants 2000)
The report argued for change in the household profile of the hostel and this would
result in an increased demand for additional social facilities such as schools cregraveches
churches libraries play area(s) etc It was found in the report that space intensive (in
terms of size) social facilities eg cregraveches and a multipurpose centre should be
encouraged within the complex (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
Additionally limited retail specifically corner shops should be established within the
complex Lastly the report suggested that it was important to align the services in the
area with the rest of the EMM and ensure adequate capacity at points where the
services connected into the hostel Roads in particular were highlighted as important
in this regard to ensure continuity and appropriate distribution of traffic movement
What is more the report states that traffic should be discouraged within the new
settlement (SJN Development Planning Consultants 2000)
The SDF marked the entire Sethokga hostel complex as lsquohostel upgradingrsquo married to
public open space within the vicinity of the complex churches sports fields and
mixed use areas were proposed in the SDF (SJN Development Planning Consultants
2000)
Page | 48
Map 4 Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial Development Framework (SDF) 2000
The development proposals in the 2000 Oakmoor area19 SDF proposed that Sethokga hostel be
Redeveloped into family units The SDF also proposed mixed use nodal developments within and around
the Oakmoor area and proposed additional facilities such as cregraveches schools and recreational
facilities in certain areas
Source SJN Development Planning Consultants Planning Area 19 Oakmoor Development
Plan Development Proposals Final Report 2000
This SDF for the area is quite old and has not been updated
since this 2000 plan
Sethokga
hostel
Page | 49
There are 22 hostels across Ekurhuleni which are spread across six regions in the metro
(Demacon 2014) Region A has two hostels of which one is government owned
region B has three hostels of which government owns two regions C D and E hosts
one hostel respectively while region F has sixteen hostels (it is not clear how many are
owned by government) (Demacon 2014)
In terms of social facilities and amenities the study area is situated within a 3km radius
from two schools Rabasotho Combined School and Philena Middle School It is also
within a 2km radius from a healthcare facility - Esselen Park Satellite Clinic - and within
a 1km radius from a sporting facility - Esselen Park Sports School of Excellence
(Demacon 2014) The nearest police station is roughly 6km away and a lsquogenerousrsquo
number of shopping as well as entertainment centres are found within a 15 to 20km
radius of the hostel The nearest taxi route is less than 100m with the nearest train
stations including the Tembisa Limindlela and Kaalfontein stations all falling within a
10km radius (Demacon 2014)
In 2013 the Tembisa economy contributed 83 to the overall economy of the EMM
whilst Ekurhuleni contributed 253 to the overall economy of the Gauteng province
in 2013 (Demacon 2014) Sethokga hostel forms part of the Kempton Park Tembisa
precinct and according the Sethokga Hostels Mixed Typology Market Analysis Report
it falls within the development context of the Kempton Park Tembisa precinct It hosts
a range of housing typologies supported under various housing programmes
(Demacon 2014) which include but are not limited to Informal Settlement Upgrading
programmes and projects Integrated Residential Development Programmes(s) and
Gap Market Housing Units According to this report there also exists several
opportunities for the development of medium to higher density residential
developments (Demacon 2014) The EMMs 2010 Metropolitan Spatial Development
Framework suggests that among the several intentions of the metro the EMM will seek
to expand the affordable housing market and that it will seek to accommodate a
wider range of the metrorsquos populace by making a range of housing options available
for people across different income groupings (Demacon 2014)
This next section exhibits the lsquoambiencersquo of Sethokga hostel as it currently stands It
delves into some detail regarding the current setting of the hostel and takes the
reader through the authorrsquos experience being in the hostel and lsquotravellingrsquo through its
narrow corridors It shares my experience of going into this dauntingly male
dominated environment riddled with metaphorical tones of disempowerment
despondency and neglect All the images displayed here were taken by the author
Page | 50
32 Visual narrative of Sethokga hostel
In terms of its infrastructure the hostel is said to still be somewhat structurally sound
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005) Aesthetically however it appears quite old and rundown
and leaves a lot to be desired The neglected state of refuse and rubble removal
adds to the wear and tear appearance of the hostel Each of the blocks that make-
up the hostel consists of separate dormitories and entry into each dormitory is gained
through a common access point - a door - that leads into a communal area with a
basic cooking and dining area There are no ceilings in any of the dormitories The
paint-work both inside and outside has long worn out In general the hostel appears
especially dull and unsightly
321 Built form architecture
Figure 4
The hostel is old and run-down
The adjoining hostel blocks are lined with a
number of lsquoinformalrsquo traders
This area that leads into one of the hostel
blocks is where a resident displays his goods
for selling
Page | 51
A number of the men have cars which they
park in their respective blocks
Walk-up that leads into one of the dorms
that is later photographed and shows the
condition of the interior of the hostel
The hostel is in an obvious state of neglect
and refuse removal is ignored
I spotted a number of chickens roaming about
in the hostel and a small vegetable garden
near one of the entrances into a dorm
There is one entry and exit point into most of
the blocks in the hostel
Page | 52
Figure 5
This is a communal cooking area It was said
that because the stove is so old and has a
number of issues the electricity powering the
stove is never turned off and so it runs
constantly through the day and night time
The area next to the cooking area is where
groceries and other goods are stored for
safe-keeping
This communal dining area also leads into
the rest of the dorm and the place where the
hostel dwellers sleep
None of the dorms have ceilings or any
added furnishings (ie lighting) The hostel
has never been re-painted or renovated
since it was built in the early 1980s
Page | 53
This corridor leads into the bedrooms where
the men sleep Sheets andor curtains lead to
what felt like very restricted distressing and
unpleasent living quarters
The compartments offer very limited room to
move around and offer little privacy There
are two beds per compartment with up to
three people sharing a bed The living
conditions are as what Ramphele (1993)
described as constraining to varying degrees
since it is a physically restricted environment
with blurred boundaries of personal private
space The physical proximity to others offers
practically no prospect for privacy or liberty
to accommodate visitors
Page | 54
Figure 6
322 Municipal amenities
Male urinal
Communal toilet
Communal shower
Most of the hostel blocks in the hostel have
electricity yet it seems to be offered for
free
The entrance (door) leading to the one
communal shower and toilet facility There is
one bathroom per dorm
Page | 55
Figure 7
323 The adjoining area
Most of the blocks in the hostels have
communal indoor as well as outdoor taps
with running water provided without
charge
lsquoInformalrsquo activity trade takes place in
and around the hostel
The council offices are situated adjacent to
one of the hostel blocks across the street
The municipality does not collect refuse in
the hostel so it is up to the hostel residents to
dispose of their refuse (it was not clear why
the municipality did not collect refuse in the
hostel)
Page | 56
According to the (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) entry and access to the hostel are
determined by ones ability to negotiate for a bed Much like what was described by
Ramphele (1993) the closest likeness to lsquohomersquo or lsquotenurersquo in hostels was in the form
of a bed this persists at Sethokga To some extent every aspect of life and survival in
Sethokga revolves around a bed
One gains entry into Sethokga through a block chairperson (Sololo interview 2015)
Some of the functions and responsibilities of these block chairpersonrsquos is to know what
is happening in that particular hostel block The illustration given by the economic
representative for the ward Mr Sololo was that
ldquoWhatever which has been happening in a particular block the chairperson
should be aware of it and should call a meeting Letrsquos say if you are sitting in a
block here and you have got a jukebox and you find that you are selling
liquor and now they tell you that by 10 orsquoclock you close down and the music
should be off Then you do not comply with that the block chairperson will
report you to the hostel committee and they will sit and come up with a fine
for you if you do not listen even after they fine you they will chase you out of
the hostelrdquo
According to Sololo interview (2015) the block chairpersons maintain peace and
order and need to ensure that any conflict is mediated They are elected by the
residents of a given block and are entrusted with their grievances Ideally they should
be first point of contact before anything is to be escalated to the ward councillor ie
if a pipe bursts and they are without water This would need to be reported to the
EMM by either the block chairperson and if the problem remains unresolved it is then
escalated to the ward councillor (Sololo interview 2015)
33 Conclusion
Chapter three has explored a number of elements which model the status quo of the
study field Ironically the conditions in the hostel are not much different to many of
the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg Sethokga hostel also resembles
many other hostels across the country The hostel is overcrowded there is little room
to manoeuvre and there is an obvious lack of privacy The hostel is a possible health
hazard to those who live in it
Page | 57
This chapter shared some of my own experience of the hostel My experience consisted out
of being in the hostel taking photographs in and around the hostel and engaging with the
living environment Inside the hostel I was engulfed by its narrow poorly lit and what felt like
stifling corridors Corridors divided by curtains and sheets led into what were very confined
sleeping compartments Beds offer a place of rest for those who have voluntarily or
involuntarily sought refuge in the hostel Many after all consider the hostels as a lsquobetterrsquo
alternative to homelessness The experience for me was unlike any I have ever felt since the
circumstance of my life has provided a certain comfort that was surely challenged in the
modest time that I spent at Sethokga Chapter four examines what has been the states
approach to hostel conversion
Page | 58
The statesrsquo approach to hostel conversion
4 Introduction
The discussion in this chapter will reflect and review South African state policy post-1994
that concerns hostels Chapter four will also critically discuss and describe the
fundamentals of what have been considered two of the leading approaches to hostel
redevelopment conversion namely the Hostel Redevelopment Programmes (HRP) and
the Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme
41 Defining the hostel conversion approach
There have been a number of state interventions post-1994 that have seemingly been a
lsquosignrsquo of governments lsquodesirersquo to improve the living conditions of not just hostel residents
but of a vast majority of South Africanrsquos who were subjected to poor living conditions
(Thurman 1997) However for the purpose of this study there will be particular focus on
interventions around hostels In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005) concur with a few
other authors that during post democracy the South African government introduced
along with other housing programmes a hostel upgrading conversion programme
aimed primarily at converting hostels into integrated family-oriented developments
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
South Africarsquos housing policy was launched in 1994 and the housing subsidy scheme
promised to deliver one million houses in five years (UrbanLankMark 2011) This would be
delivered through a range of subsidy mechanisms (UrbanLankMark 2011) According to
Dyiki interview(2015) in 1995 or about 1996 a National Hostel Redevelopment Policy was
approved and was among one of the primary national housing programmes (Dyiki
interview 2015) To facilitate nation-building and effective state formation it was believed
that social programmes such as state funded housing programmes would play a pivotal
role in this regard (Netshitenzhe 2011) Moreover the nation-building agenda saw the
government set the country bold and far-reaching goals and these somewhat became
associated with certain policies ideologies and norms (Netshitenzhe 2011) However
redundant budgetary rituals inadequate feasibility studies weak project evaluation
bureaucratic inefficiency managing community expectations and political interference
have been some of the issues that have held back progress (von Holdt 2010 and
Pienaar 2010) As a result housing provided by government has often been poorly
Page | 59
located and in some respect it has continued to perpetuate a reality of spatial
segregation (Charlton et al 2014)
This next section will describe how the hostel conversion approach has been articulated
through state policy through subsequent grants and schemes
42 State policy the evolution of the hostel redevelopment conversion approach
Through the provision of grants and schemes government has made efforts to provide
funding for the redevelopment conversion of hostels However there has been
somewhat of a bias on public sector hostels as the grants are provided mainly for the
redevelopment conversion of hostels owned by municipalities or provincial government
(Department of Human Settlements 2015) In their work Pienaar and Cloete (2005)
provide a synopsis of some of governmentsrsquo earliest approaches to addressing lsquothe hostel
issuersquo (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) This is summarised as follows
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Peoples Housing Process
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme (this will be discussed in
section 42)
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Arguably the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units
Programme have been the lsquochampionsrsquo of state efforts to grapple with the vast
challenges around hostels hostel life and the social ills that have become endemic to
hostels (Dyiki 2006) The essence of the approaches listed below was that hostels would
be redeveloped converted to create sustainable human living conditions To re-
integrated these hostel communities into the surrounding township communities (Pienaar
and Cloete 2005)
421 The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership
The Project-linked Capital Subsidy Scheme for first time home-ownership was premised on
the notion that Developers this could also include the municipality would be able to
submit project proposals for the development of housing on stands that were serviced for
people who qualified in terms of eligibility criteria eg a combined household income of
Page | 60
the beneficiary versus the available subsidy amount provided by the state Households
would then be required to contribute to the development (that is the construction of their
house) from their own savings or through what was referred to as lsquosweet equityrsquo
(providing their own material and labour) Locational and geographic factors would also
affect the amount of the subsidy by 2005 Pienaar and Cloete (2005) noted that this
subsidy had delivered an approximate 13 million homes which were primarily low-cost
free-standing
In the case of hostels redevelopment one option was that the subsidy could be used to
build new free-standing dwellings for individual full title ownership on unused portions of
land within hostel complexes This option would require sub-division of the land as well as
the installation of additional service Under the provisions of the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme another option would be to convert existing dormitories into family
apartments that could be sold off to beneficiaries under sectional title This sectional title
is a form of ownership where an individual holds title to a dwelling unit it can be a free-
standing unit or part of a multi-unit storey building The individual owns title together
with all the other owners of sectional dwellings on that property an undivided share of the
land on which the dwellings are built (Pienaar and Cloete 2005) However the challenge
was that where existing dormitories were converted and sold under title the projects
would be exposed to a host of problems that sectional title properties generally
encountered in low-income areas in the private sector ie poor management and
maintenance and difficulties in collecting levies and service debts (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
422 The Peoplersquos Housing Process
The Peoplersquos Housing Process was reportedly introduced to enable communities
particularly those in disadvantaged areas to participate in the provision of their own
housing without the participation interference or involvement of private developers
However technical and administrative support and consultation would be offered by
Housing Support Organisations which were approved to serve this function (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005) What were termed as facilitation grants would be made available by the
government to lsquokick-startrsquo the housing projects The beneficiaries could apply for a grant
to pay for the services rendered by the Housing Support Organisation(s) and the housing
subsidy would be the same as for what was contained in the Project-linked Capital
Subsidy Scheme According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) hostel residents could as a
community collective make use of this avenue as a means of obtaining ownership of an
improved residence with the assistance of their local authority a non-governmental
Page | 61
organisation (NGO) or perhaps a cluster of professions who could provide support and
administrative assistance as their Housing Support Organisation (Pienaar and Cloete
2005)
423 The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing
The Institutional Subsidy for Social Housing was introduced in 1995 and was essentially a
variant of the project-linked subsidy provided to non-profit institutions independent of
government and registered as legally approved entities Households earning less than
R3500 per month would be provided through this subsidy with subsidised rental housing
by these entities In 1995 when the subsidy was introduced it carried a once-off capital
grant of R16 000 per dwelling but by 2002 the amount had increased to R27 000 as part of
the governmentrsquos aspiration to promote medium density housing Pienaar and Cloete
(2005) note that because the hostel redevelopment programme had been in limbo for
several years at the time of their study the Institutional Subsidy approach had been
considered as a viable alternative to accelerate hostel conversion projects The tenure
options under this subsidy it was proposed would include
Rental
Co-operative ownership
An instalment sale option in the form of a lsquorent to buyrsquo practice with a
minimum rental period of four years to qualify for the conversion to ownership
(Pienaar and Cloete 2005)
424 The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
Under the National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing
the National Housing Code (for subsidised housing) delineates subsidised housing as
Permanent residential structures that have security of tenure both internal
and external privacy
Housing that has portable water serviced with adequate energy and sanitary
facilities
The National Housing Norms and Standards for Government Subsidised Housing were set
to give effect to the objectives of the Housing Act 1997 which came into effect on 1 April
Page | 62
1998 To ensure quality and durable housing products that complied with particular
minimum standards (National Housing Report 2009) For instance dwellings had to have
a minimum gross floor area of 30m2 but this has since been amended (Pienaar and
Cloete 2005)
425 International interest and intervention in the hostel redevelopment conversion
approach in the country
Some international interest has been generated to consider intervention in hostels and
efforts to redevelopingconverting hostels The point of this section is to illustrate that
hostels occupied and in some respect have continued to occupy a unique position in
the countryrsquos physical and mental landscape They are one of many representations of
the physical manifestation of three centuries of systematic racial discrimination and
economic exploitation (Thurman 1997) The consolidation of the migrant labour system
through hostels the poor living conditions of hostels the dishonour of hostel life and the
control they exert on the African populace Saw hostels gaining the attention of a
number of international agencies and authorities who put resources towards and took an
interest in reconfiguring the disposition of hostels (Dyiki interview 2015)
In the period between August 2002 and April 2003 the USAID (United States Agency for
International Development) extended its support to community based approaches to
housing in South Africa and in turn created a platform where it would have input(s) into
South Africarsquos national housing policy (Urban Sector Network 2003)
Hostel redevelopment was supported under a grant provision provided by the USAID this
had two main objectives The first was that policy and information dissemination should
serve as key objectives and secondly that USAID would have a voice in the facilitation of
hostel redevelopments Initially the grant was meant to run from 23 August 2000 to 30
August 2002 but an extension was requested and the grant extended for the period 1
September 2002 to 30 April 2003 (Urban Sector Network 2003) Additionally the on-goings
of the programme instituted under the grant were to include the following activities
Identifying and conducting research into tenure options and feasible
management models for hostels
Identifying possible needs and challenges and to then conduct nation-wide
research in the hostel sector
Facilitating workshops and consolidating policy submissions and to submit
research papers to the Department of Housing
Page | 63
To publish research papers
To conduct mid-term and final evaluation of the programme
Conducting information outreaches where the USN (Urban Sector Network) would
play an essential role in informing government the private sector as well as
communities about the opportunities which could be created through the
redevelopment of hostels (Urban Sector Network2003)
The Urban Sector Network (USN) then proceeded to make specific recommendations on
the hostel redevelopment approach The USN called for the broadening on the scope of
the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment Programme to include all hostels (private and
grey sector) and not just public sector hostel Recommendations were made that the
norms and standards for the redeveloped hostels should be developed along with
national guidelines for the management of redeveloped hostels by local authorities They
advocated for stronger support for co-operative housing The redevelopment of hostels
to be approached in an integrated and holistic manner and hostels should not be
redeveloped in an isolated manner The subsidy amount for hostels redevelopment and
social facilitation needed to be increased Lastly that hostels redevelopment should
support livelihood strategies and capacity building and training of hostel residents during
the redevelopment process was essential (Urban Sector Network 2003)
The USN proposed a departure from the public sector hostel redevelopment bias of the
Hostel Redevelopment plan (Urban Sector Network 2003)
43 The Hostel Redevelopment Programme (HRP)
In principal the Hostel Redevelopment Programme supported an unambiguous bias in
favour of public sector hostels (Dyiki 2006) Public sector hostels are those hostels
owned by either provincial or local authorities that offered accommodation to workers
from a range of industries (Thurman 1997) Grey sector hostels (in which the structures
wereare owned by private companies but the land by a provincial or local authority
and private sector hostels) did not form part of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme
(Dyiki 2006) The biggest limitation and challenge of the HRP was in its narrow focus on
solely the conversion of hostels beds (Thurman 1997) The aim of the HRP was to provide
a subsidy allocation that was based per bed but it was criticised as being impractical
and unfeasible and not adequately addressing the issue of housing provision (Dyiki
2006) Dyiki interview (2015) believes that the challenge of the HRP was that it was not
talking to individuals but rather it was a subsidy given to the state to improve the hostel
and the standard of living in the hostel Since most of the public sector hostels were
Page | 64
managed by the municipalities the municipalities received the subsidy and the
residents of the hostels therefore had very little say in how the subsidy could in effect be
used The other challenge was that grey sector and public sector hostels were not part
of the subsidy (Dyiki interview 2015)
The Hostel Redevelopment Programme was perhaps the earliest strategy conceived by
the South African government as a national policy aiming to
Promote habitable and humane conditions in hostel conversions
Ensure the involvement of hostel residents the surroundingneighbouring
community and relevant (publicprivate) authorities and any other entity
affected by the project are involved in the decision-making processes
Facilitate and promote social integration within hostel communities and the
hostels and adjacent communities
Put measures in place to accommodate any persons displaced by the hostel
conversion project
Empower promote economic development and seeks to be development-
oriented
According to Pienaar and Cloete (2005) the Public Sector Hostels Redevelopment
Programme was largely based on the premise that this programme would make some
provisions for grant funding from the central government towards the conversion or
upgrading of hostels particularly public sector or grey-sector hostels This will be done with
the broad aim of the programme to facilitate and create living conditions for residents
that are humane and hygienic by providing prospects for housing options that are
affordable and sustainable With tenure options for
Rental
Possible ownership for those at the lower income scale
Upon its conception a capital subsidy of R16 000 was initially proposed per family or R4
000 per individual Additionally to be eligible for this programme hostel redevelopment
programmes would need to be
Planned and implemented in a participative and comprehensive manner
with the requirement that interest groups would need to be established
Based on socio-economic studies undertaken to determine and consider the
needs and affordability aspect of those who would be affected (ie stand to
benefit from the project)
Page | 65
Unfailing in ensuring that there is no displacement of residents unless
alternative accommodation is provided
Sustainable with regards to the on-going payments of maintenance and any
other related costs
Purposeful to augment employment opportunities for the hostel residents as
well as the locals in the construction and on-going maintenance of the
project
The broad aim of the Hostel Redevelopment Programme (Mdunyelwa 2015) was to
convert these historically male-occupied spaces which were also subsequently meant
for migrant labourers to family units But it will be done in such a way to able and
capacitate the accommodation of the families of these men In some way but perhaps
not explicitly stated in the Hostel Redevelopment Programme policy brief there is an
element of urbanisation that is implied Therefore it was an attempt to somewhat
encourage the men to relocate their families from their rural home-base (Mdunyelwa
2015)
The shortcomings of the HRP in how it had a restricted focus on hostel beds and
somewhat of an oversight on the complexity of the configuration of hostels saw it being
replaced by the Community Residential Units Programme (CRU) (Pienaar 2010) Dyiki
interview (2015) in my interview with him argued that the CRU Programme unlike the HRP
contains a lot more detail that was perhaps missed in the HRP He further suggested that
the CRU Programme could be considered somewhat of a lsquocost recoveryrsquo strategy by
government to recoup some of the monies spent on these projects As the CRU
programme has a strong rental housing stock component to it (Dyiki interview 2015)
44 The Community Residential Units Programme (CRU Programme)
The Community Residential Units (CRU) Programme has since replaced the National
Hostel Redevelopment Programme At the time of this study there are approximately
2000 public hostels across the country with a vast majority of them still needing to be
afforded some attention and measures to redevelop them (Demacon 2014) According
to the Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the CRU Programme (2006)
the CRU Programme aims to facilitate the provision of secure and stable rental tenure for
lower income persons Furthermore stating that the programme seeks to provide a
framework for addressing the many and varied forms of existing public sector residential
accommodation as the previous approach under the HRP only considered a ldquoper-bedrdquo
Page | 66
approach that proved unfavourable on a number of occasions (CRU Programme Policy
Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme is believed to provide a lsquobetterrsquo suited programme and a coherent
framework to assist in dealing with a vast range of public stock which has for the most
part been indecisively and incomprehensively dealt with (Demacon 2014) The CRU
Programme targets low income individuals as well as households with an average R 3500
monthly income and who have not been able to find suitable accommodation
According to the CRU Programme in the years leading up to 2006 there was an
approximate 4512 of households nationally which fall within the R0-R800 income groups
currently renting and an approximate 4027 falling within the R801 ndash R3200 income
groups (CRU Programme Policy Framework 2006)
The CRU Programme intends to cover the following areas
a) Public hostels that are owned by Provincial Housing Departments and municipalities
b) ldquoGreyrdquo hostels which are hostel that have both a public and private ownership
component due to historical reasons
c) Public housing stock that forms part of the ldquoEnhanced Extended Discount Benefit
Schemerdquo but which cannot be transferred to individual ownership and has to be
managed as rental accommodation by the public owner
d) Post-1994 newly developed public residential accommodation owned by provincial
housing departments and municipalities
e) Existing dysfunctional abandoned andor distressed buildings in inner city or township
areas that have been taken over by a municipality and funded by housing funds
(Department of Human Settlements 2015)
The CRU programme policy document is quite a laborious document In general the CRU
programme seeks to promote and advance the provision of rental options for lower
income groups facilitate communication and participation of residents throughout the
process provide a variety of rental stock and provide secure and stable rental stock This
will be done by what the CRU Programme articulates as providing a realistic funding
programme (Department of Human Settlements 2015)
According to the CRU programme rental stock provided by the programme is to be
owned by either a provincial housing department or a municipality However this has
been a seriously contested position on the part of the individuals and households
affected by the programme who want home ownership (Dyiki interview 2015)
Page | 67
45 Conclusion
There have been a number of projects over the past several years which have in part
articulated the states aspiration to reconfigure the lsquoway of lifersquo in hostels The Hostel
Redevelopment Programme and the Community Residential Units Programme are
considered to have been the leading approaches to reconfiguring hostels within the
countryrsquos broader landscape Whether hostels have or do not have a place in
democratic South Africa is part of what this study is looking to explore
Chapter five introduces the Sethokga hostel conversion project and in principal seeks to
unpack the conceptualisation of the project while reflecting on the findings of the
interviews
Page | 68
The Sethokga hostel conversion project
5 Introduction
Chapter five will examine the Sethokga hostel conversion project and seek to unpack
how the project has been conceptualised Discussing the main components of the
project its main stakeholders the project phases exploring what are its defining
characteristics the broad vision and aim of the project how the project has understood
the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn set to address them and then also
in what way(s) the residents of the hostel have been involved in the project Furthermore
this chapter will examine what the project considers important in terms of gender issues
what have been some limitations of the project while it also considers what the
anticipated impact and benefit of the project is
Lastly and in view of the interviews that were conducted chapter five discusses how the
residents of the hostel and the community of Tembisa and greater Ekurhuleni will know
that the project has been completed and has been successful By and large this chapter
offers testament of the findings from the field work and reviews the rationale of the
Sethokga conversion project To conclude this chapter a collage of diagrams and
images will be presented to provide the reader with greater insight(s) into the Sethokga
hostel conversion project
51 Outline of the main components of the project
511 Main stakeholders and their role(s) in the project
There have been a number of stakeholders involved in the Sethokga hostel conversion
project the main stakeholders include
o The Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlement (GPDHS)
o LTE Consulting
o The Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
o The ward councillor and various community committees and leaders
o The Sethokga Hostel residents
o The community of Tembisa
Page | 69
The roles of the stakeholders are summarised as follows National government is the key
funder of the Sethokga hostel conversion project the funds are transferred to the GPDHS
who have to then ensure that the costs of the project are managed LTE Consulting is a
consulting company appointed by the GPDHS for the oversight and construction of the
Sethokga hostel conversion project They work in collaboration with the EMM (the local
authority) and its various departments such as the services department the energy
department quality assurance etc However the GPDHS remains the lsquomain decision-
makerrsquo and lsquocustodianrsquo of the project with the lead oversight on the budget and
programmeproject management The project manager Mr Sisa Majikijela is the official
from the GPDHS that is directly responsible for supervision and coordination of the
project The ward councillor and the various community committees leaders facilitate
avenues of communication and engagement between the officials (from province the
EMM and LTE) with the residents of Sethokga and community lsquoAs the eyes and ears on
the groundrsquo (Majikijela interview 2015) ideally the ward councillor and various
community committees leaders have an important role to play in ensuring that the
Sethokga residents and community will be the rightful recipients of the project The
Sethokga hostel residents and broader community have a vested interest in the project
because it stands to affect andor benefit them (Sololo interview2015)
Once the project is completed with the family units fully constructed (ie with furnishings
such as trees plants parking bays and so forth) and the services installed The project will
be handed over to the EMM for on-going administration maintenance and the
collection of rentals (Shibambo interview 2015) The Gauteng Provincial Department of
Human Settlement in collaboration with the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and LTE
Consulting play a key role as facilitates of the conversion of Sethokga hostel into family
units (Majikijela interview 2015)
522 Project phases
The data regarding the project phases was easily accessible and generously provided by
the consulting resident engineer and the architect providing me with a market analysis
study and a few other key documents The development concept of the hostel
conversion project divides the project into three phases and further subdivides each of
the phases into two phases phases A and B (Demacon 2014)
Initial studies (ie pre-feasibility studies) were done in 2008 but the demolition of the first
four blocks of the hostel demolished for the current phase 1A only took place in August of
2011 and it was anticipated that phase 1A would be completed and handed over to the
Page | 70
municipality by the end of 2014 but this did not happen (Majikijela interview 2015) At the
time of conducting fieldwork between the months of August and September 2015 it was
said that phase 1A was near completion with just the landscaping parking and water
provision left to completed (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
Phase 1A of the project was meant to bring to completion a total of 240 units
accommodating 1 194 people to provide 69 parking bays (one per four units) a total of
54 one bedroom units 117 two bedroom units and 69 three bedroom units at an average
unit size of 324m2 477m2 and 588m2 for the one two and three bedrooms respectively
(Demacon 2014) However only a total of 222 units have been built and this shortfall was
largely attributed to the underlying dolomite geological conditions of the site (Bako and
Shibambo interview 2015)
52 The conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
The Sethokga hostel conversion project has been administered under the CRU
programme and forms part of a national agenda to convert hostels into family units
(Dyiki interview 2015) The target group under the CRU programme is individuals and
households earning between R800 and R3 500 per month who are able to enter what the
CRU programme has termed the lsquoformal private rental and social housing marketrsquo
(Demacon 2014)
The new residential units (the family units) are situated on ervan 128 and 5729 of the
Sethokga complex within the administrative jurisdiction of the Kempton Park Customer
Care Area (CCA) which is the administrative body conducting oversight of development
and town planning affairs for the Tembisa and Kempton Park areas (Demacon 2014)
The family units are three storey walk-ups and appear somewhat spacious and far more
appealing than the hostel structures The CRU proposes that bachelorsone bedroom
units of 20m2 to 35m2 should be allocated at a monthly rental of R270 ndash R450 a two
bedroom unit of 35m2-45m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R450 to R850 and
that a three bedroom unit of 45m2-80m2 should be rented at a monthly rental of R850 ndash
R1650 Rentals have been and remain a contestation in a number of hostel conversion
projects across the country and Sethokga is no different According to the economic
representative for the ward Sololo interview (2015) the residents of Sethokga hostel are
contesting that they want to pay R150 for a one bedroom unit R200 for a two bedroom
unit and R300 for a three bedroom unit
According to the principles of the CRU programme the ownership of the rental housing
stock is to be reserved by either the Gauteng Provincial Department of Human
Page | 71
Settlement (GPDHS) or the EMM The ownership of the family units can be transferred by
the GPDHS to the EMM in line with the Housing Act no right(s) of ownership can be
transferred to tenants (Pienaar 2010)
The process of the Sethokga hostel conversion has on an administrative and government
support level been facilitated through a grant allocation from national government to
province (GPDHS) This grant has made provisions for pre-feasibility studies
socialcommunity facilitation the relocationreallocation of some residents (within the
hostel or to alternative sites to make way for demolition and construction of phase 1A)
and the consideration and compensation of construction costs and professional fees
(Majikijela interview 2015) The allocation of the units determining rental structures
applying indigent relief measures where necessary rental collection and maintenance
as well as the management of the family units are factors determined by the GPDHS and
the EMM cooperatively (Sololo interview 2015) The hostel residents are then at some
level consulted and lsquoencouragedrsquo to participate in this regard (Dyiki interview 2015)
Seemingly throughout project implementation the stakeholders have been kept informed
of the status and progress of the project With respect to notifying the hostel residents and
general public notices are placed in and around the hostel to inform them of meetings
and the ward councillorrsquos office take the lead on this (Mthethwa interview 2015)
There have been a number of communitypublic meetings that have taken place as the
project has progressed From the fieldwork I was not able to draw on precisely how many
meetings had taken place since or precisely when the meetings took place or what was
discussed in each of those meetings Generally the ward councillor said at least once a
month a consultative and progress report meeting would take place between the
various stakeholders where officials would engage the hostel residents and general
public
According to Majikijela interview (2015) the ward councillor and the economic rep the
main area of involvement on the part of the hostel residents has been in providing
labour A small percentage of the residents have been involved in the construction-work
and some of the clerical work on the project Their involvement in discussions on the
project is said to often be arbitrarily halted by political interference (Sololo interview
2015) For instance Bako interview (2015) the architect recalled that on the design of the
family units Liefa Architects did not talk to the end user ie the residents to ask them
what they wanted Instead a design which was informed by other examples of similar
projects was presented to the residents of Sethokga and the general public (Bako
interview 2015) ldquoThe design of the hostel was not lsquoexclusiversquo to Sethokga and its contextrdquo
(Bako interview 2015)
Page | 72
In relation to the size of the hostel and its residents only a very small percentage of the
hostel residents have been employed in the project the December 2013 January 2014
labour records reported the following
Table 1
Total workforce 66
Females 7
Males 59
Youth 28
Adults 38
Semi-skilled 20
Skilled 22
Disabled 0
General workers 24
Source LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor report
I was fortunate to have attended one of the community meetings that were held at an
old community hall within the vicinity of the hostel This meeting took place on a
Saturday the 15th of August 2015 and it was quite the experience There was a relatively
strong police presence at the meeting The police kept watch and managed the
activities inside and outside the community hall As there were concerns that the
proceedings might get out of hand and a possible tussle between those in attendance
might arise The meeting was chaired by the ward councillor and aside from the residents
of Sethokga in attendance was one official from the GPDHS an official from the EMM
community leaders and ANC committee members
There was an obvious and overwhelming male presence in the meeting tempers ran
high and there was an observable resistance from the residents of Sethokga to the
presence of the three females in the meeting This included me and two female
committee members Several times the meeting was disrupted by shouts and echoes of
discontentment questioning what women were doing at a meeting for men lsquordquothey have
no place here they do not even live hererdquo were the words of some of the men Our
presence seemed to really infuriate some of the men This was similar to what Ramphele
(1993) Segal (1991) Thurman (1997) and Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) observed in
their work and suggested that even now and within the context of Sethokga that the
men in the hostel are still quite at odds with having women as a part of their lsquogathering of
Page | 73
menrsquo and possibly even living among them The demeanour of some of the men in this
meeting suggested that they found the presence and role of women in these meetings
unneeded It was evident that these men had become far too accustomed to living
lsquoalonersquo as men Ramphele (1993) noted that the idea of an unambiguous constant and
unrestricted presence of women and children in the hostel seemed to be a serious point
of contention for some of men Some men expressed unwillingness while others a
struggle to comprehend or endorse this change that seemed overly unfamiliar and
challenging to come to grips with (Ramphele 1993) From my observation in this meeting
the same seems to hold true for Sethokga
The purpose of the meeting was to consult the hostel residents who were identified to be
the first recipients beneficiaries of the allocating of family units to consult them on issues
of final rental proposals allocation processes and status of the project The invitation for
this meeting was apparently only extended to those particular individuals but
subsequently the meeting was taken over by those who had objections to the process of
allocation rentals and why the meeting sought to exclude them and divide the residents
Generally the meeting was unruly and the ward councillor as well as the community
leaders and committee members struggled to manage the crowd and the rampant
tempers in the room
The agenda for the meeting is provided below to provide the reader with some context
and outline of the intension of the meeting Unfortunately tempers ran especially high in
this meeting and in my opinion none of the items on the agenda were successfully
addressed
Page | 74
Figure 8 August 15 community meeting agenda
Source Sethokga Community meeting 2015
521 Broad vision and aim of the project
The vision and aim of the project was described by the key informants who to some
extent unanimously used the following key words integration sustainability community
participation to improve peoplersquos lives restoring honour addressing the ills of hostel life
and bringing families into a safe and secure environment The housing officer for me
captured well the overall sentiments of the key informants when he said ldquowe are
surrounded and have so many companies in Tembisa so clearly you will find letrsquos say a
white guy working in the area but then they travel to Kempton Park or some other area
outside Tembisa and that is where they live So it would be nice to see him living in
Sethokga The project is about integration and not just integrating the residents of
Page | 75
Sethokga to the rest of the township but other ways of integration like racial integration
That is what I want to seerdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015)
Additionally the broad vision and aim of the hostel conversion project is to instil a culture
of payment into not just the hostel but the broader community ldquoPeople cannot just keep
wanting everything for free government cannot afford itrdquo The interviewees that
expressed this position were Majikijela Sololo Mthethwa Dyiki Bako and Shibambo
Seemingly under the CRU programme the project would seek to influence and instil this
culture of payment through the rental housing stock focus of the programme That
largely seeks to promote government owned and managed rental housing stock a
departure from the lsquofreersquo housing approach (Bako interview 2015)
Figure 9 Preliminary layout of the Sethokga development
Source Liefa Architects 2015
Phase 1B Phase 2B Phase 3B
Phase 1A Phase 2A
Phase 3A
Page | 76
What was surprising to me was that the family units are not intended to be occupied by
current residents only The idea is that some of the current residents would live elsewhere
and when this question was posed to the official from the GPDHS Majikijelarsquos interview
(2015) response was that the hostel residents who did not qualify in terms of the required
criteria for the renting of the units would be allocated RDPs in the neighbouring area of
Esselen Park but he could not provide clarity as to how and when this would happen
The vision of Sethokga that can be seen from the plan provided below is a reconfigured
locality Rehabilitated single-sex compounds into self contained family units furnished
with child care facilities park(s) garden(s) a community centre recreation facilities and
parking areas
522 How the project has understood the needs and challenges of the residents and in turn
set out to address those needs and challenges
Although the CRU Programme only sets particular administrative operational and
project facilitation guidelines Arguably these guidelines do in some respect address
a number of the ills associated with hostels such as the issue of overcrowding lack of
privacy and poor living conditions (Pienaar 2010) Within Sethokga there are
challenges of tribalism high prevalence of HIV drug abuse alcohol abuse
criminality overcrowding lack of privacy possible health hazards a lack of ablution
facilities The hostel being unsafe for women (especially those who are staying in the
hostel illegally) was identified and shared by the key informants as some of the major
challenges confronting the hostel This view was shared by the ward councillor the
housing officer from the EMM the project manager from the GPDHS the consulting
engineer and the wardrsquos economic representative
According to the ward councillor Cllr Mohlapamaswi the issue of tribalism occurred
as a result of what he recalls as a defining political shift ldquoafter the release of Mandela
and when they started preaching lsquothis thing of democracyrsquo that the divisions
happened according to who was Zulu or Xhosa or Pedi or Venda helliprdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) Here the ward councillor explains what he saw as
some of the factors that led to what is currently the strong predominance of Pedi and
Xhosa speaking men living in the hostel suggesting that
ldquoThey were mixed here when they started talking about negotiations that
there must be elections and then the IFP (Inkatha Freedom Party) was
rejecting that and that had nothing to do with membership it was a situation
of the warlords the Zulursquos terrorizing the Xhosarsquos because Mandela was Xhosa
Page | 77
and standing with the white man The Zulursquos did not like that so that is where
the Zulu and Xhosa divide started and that is when you found that in
Sethokga it became predominantly more Xhosa there was fighting and war
the Zulursquos were chasing people out of their territory at the other hostels The
Xhosarsquos ran to Sethokga There was fighting everywhere even here in
Sethokga and all over the Pedis Vendas Tsongarsquos they all ran away from
those hostels where they were being chased out and they came hererdquo
(Mohlapamaswi interview 2015)
It was unclear as to the extent to which the project dealt with any of these
challenges and how or if they were factored into the project The project seems to
have a general lsquobest practicersquo approach to hostel conversion irrespective of the
circumstance of a particular hostel
523 What have been some of the limitations of the project
ldquoThe political volatility of the project poses an enormous threat to the successful
allocationletting of the family unitsrdquo (Majikijela interview 2015) On the part of the
key informants their continued inability to answer the perhaps not so simple question
of what would happen to those who could not afford the monthly rental of the family
units This suggested that the issue of rentals has remained a grey area even as the
project heads towards project completion ldquoWe will worry about that when we get
thererdquo was the brisk response to my inquiry on this matter Similar to what was
observed by Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010) in the City Deep Redevelopment
project Sethokga faces a similar challenge
Certainly public community participation in any context is a complex and at times a
contentious exercise (Mdunyelwa 2015) I remain hesitant whether the Sethokga
hostel conversion project has been able to lsquotrulyrsquo engage residents and the broader
community in a transparent and reciprocal manner Seemingly affordability will be
the determining factor of who will be able to rent a unit To those who cannot afford
it stands to be seen what remedy will be extended to them
Moreover the following factors were cited as some of the limitations of the project
the lack of transparency political interference an inadequate dissemination of
information to residentscommunity and the projects failure to respond to what the
solution(s) will be for lsquonon-qualifyingrsquo residents who cannot afford the monthly rentals
Page | 78
524 How will the residents of the hostel and the community in general know that the
project is completed and has been successful
I wanted to find out from the key informants particularly those who have been
directly involved in the conversion project what for them would constitute a
successful project and how from their point of view the residents and the greater
community would know that the project is completed and has been
successfulunsuccessful Overall the leading response was that a project would be
successful when the family units are occupied Some of the interviewees added that
the process of allocating the units and resolving the myriad of issues are most
certainly likely to cause further delays and will require intricate resolution (ie peoplersquos
unwillingness and otherrsquos inability to pay tension and opposition to paying rentals
opening the letting to tenants who are not hostel residents and so forth)
In summary the thoughts shared by the housing office at the EMM and the wardrsquos
economic representative capture in essence the general position held by every one
of the key informants
ldquoFor me a complete project will be the units functioning on their own and then
people will be told during a public meeting We also need to involve the mayor the
MECs and the media People will be told that it is finished and this is what is going to
happenrdquo (Mthethwa interview 2015) ldquoAfter it has been completed I want to see 80
percent of the people who have been staying in the hostel still residing in the hostel
It must not just be open to whomever There are people as far as Johannesburg who
want to stay here because they see it being comfortable and nice forgetting we are
looking to improve the lives of the current hostel dwellers There are even those in the
township who think that people of the hostel cannot pay so this is not for themrdquo
(Sololo interview 2015)
Page | 79
53 Visual narrative of the family units
531 Architectural designsplans
The design of the family units is what the architect referred to as a multi-storey approach
ldquoThe three storey walk-ups address the need for housing much better than an RDP wouldrdquo
(Bako interview 2015) They have an urban apartment-like feel about them but the
mundane (uniform) paintwork gives them a distinct government provided social housing feel
Figure 10 Phase 1 ndash site development plan
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 80
Figure 12 Architects Section E - E
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 11 Architects Section F ndash F
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 13 South Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 81
Figure 14 North Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 15 East Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Figure 16 West Elevation
Source Liefa Architects (2015)
Page | 82
532 The project site of family units
Figure 17 Collage of imagery of the project site
View of the site of the family units from one of
the hostel blocks situated adjacent to the
construction site across the street
Construction of the family units
commenced in August of 2011
Site notice placed at the entrance of the
family units construction site
The Sethokga community hall situated at
the entrance to the family units
construction site and adjacent to the
council offices
Page | 83
For the most partthe construction of the
family units is nearing completetion
Walking through the site personally I felt that
the family units had a somewhat prominent
RDP lsquolookrsquo about them
Ground floor view
The entrance into the construction site of the
family units and the site office which is
situtated within the vicinity of the site
Page | 84
533 Inside the Family units
Figure 18 Collage of imagery of inside one of the three bedroom family units
Doorway into one of the three bedroom
family units which leads into an open plan
dining and kitchen area
Each unit has its own dining sitting and
kitchen area
The construction site is lsquopolicedrsquo by the Red
Ants (a private security company)around the
clock and also a private security company
Some of the security members seen on site
they insisted I take a picture of them to
include in this study
Page | 85
Built-in sink and geyser
The family
units offer a number of distinct qualities that
the hostel clearly does not have which
include privacy and a dignified living
environmentspace
Each unit has its bathroom with a built-in
toilet bath and shower
Shower
Separate and additional toilet as part of the
three bedroom family units
The diningsitting area and two adjacent
bedrooms
Page | 86
The site of the family units is being guarded by a private security company and members
of the Red Ants (a private security company) When asked about this the official (the
project manager overseeing the Sethokga hostel conversion project) from the GPDHS
said that this was necessary to ensure that no unauthorised occupations take place This
was also to guard against any possible vandalism or the looting of materialsequipment
or the site office (Majikijela interview 2015)
54 Summary of main themes and findings
This study had a number of themes which resonate with the case study The localised
context of Sethokga hostel offered great insights into the current state of hostels as
spaces and places that still largely exist within a context of volatility poor living conditions
and complex socio-economic challenges (Thurman 1997) The historic exploits on hostels
revealed and I suppose confirmed that the hostel system was established supported and
perpetuated by methodical policy and controls to discourage the permanent settlement
of Africans in urban areas or any intention of relocating their family to urban areas (Segal
1991) Furthermore within the contemporary South African context this has posed a
number of challenges and has been a longstanding reality of a number of hostel dwellers
as observed in the work of Benit-Gbaffou and Mathoho (2010)
The view from one of the family units (a ground
floor three bedroom unit) is onto the ward
councillorrsquos offices and the hostel in the
distance
One of the three bedrooms in the family
units
Page | 87
Sethokga hostel is also one of many hostels that exist within a historically-laden context
The strong prominence of Pedi and Xhosa native speaking men in some respect also
speaks to the events of circular migration that are still a lived-reality of the men of
Sethokga This according to the ward councillor has meant that the men have had to
maintain ties with their families in the Eastern Cape and Limpopo while most of them live
in Sethokga away from their families (Mohlapamaswi interview 2015) In terms of gender
issues the aspect of men and housing the hostel conversion project does not adopt a
particular stand on this Seemingly the project makes no effort to appreciate the
apparent rural location of the wives partners children and families of a vast majority of
the men in Sethokga The idea is that anyone who is able to afford the monthly rental of
the family units can sign a lease agreement and rent a unit However this presents a
number of issues and leaves a lot unaccounted for and unanswered ie will the families
of the men in the hostels make a transition to join them in the family units Is this even a
possibility for them what impact would this have on the already stretched social
amenities in the area Arguably in the case of Sethokga this oversight has been a serious
area of contention and has amplified the political volatility of the project
The heavy-handedness of the hostel system cunningly imposed a sense of no escape
yet quite interestingly the later unwillingness to change (Ramphele 1993) The
unwillingness to change or perhaps the difficulty in comprehending any such change
was and is still arguably evidenced in the reluctance of some hostel dwellers to have their
hostel converted into family units (Thurman 1997)
Among the key findings of the research report is that the lsquorental onlyrsquo tenure option and
approach to the hostel conversion project was the biggest challenge and one of the
most critical points of contention (Pienaar 2010) On the one hand the hostel residents
are arguing that they cannot afford the proposed rentals while on the other hand
officials are of the opinion that this is in fact untrue and not wholly representative of the
attitude(s) of all the hostel residents Thus a supposed unwillingness to pay and a culture
of entitlement was cited by the key informants as the underlying state of affairs and one
that posed the biggest threat to the project and in particular how the family units would
be allocated
Although the project is for the most part about converting Sethokga hostel into family
units in principal it is also about redress integration improving the living conditions of
Sethokga residents reconfiguring the mental and physical landscape of hostels in
contemporary South Africa and introducing children and women into the hostel
Integration was repeatedly cited by the key informants as the main imperative of the
study Political interference and the very particular sensitivities around political allegiance
Page | 88
(keeping in the mind the local elections are fast approaching) are factors that were
cited would cause the greatest difficulty in the allocation of the family units
54 Conclusion
Undoubtedly the Sethokga hostel conversion project has a number of components and
features to it that are complex in part ambiguous and would require further and more
detailed study Seemingly the CRU programme is a lsquodeparturersquo from the Hostel
Redevelopment Programme In part it offers prospects to facilitate the provision of
affordable rental tenure for those earning below R3500 while seeking to promote the
integration of publicsocial housing into the broader housing market Under the
administration of the CRU programme one of the leading aims is to facilitate the creation
of sustainable public housing assets (Pienaar 2010) However the CRU programme has
been criticised as a framework that is largely operating in a policy environment that is
hostile elaborate and not speaking to the needs of the people on the ground
Furthermore many see it as solely a hostel upgrading policy viewed often to be done
impromptu in response to local pressures (Pienaar 2010) To paraphrase Pienaar (2010)
the vagueness regarding the roles and responsibilities of the respective provincial
department of human settlement and municipalities has not provided much confidence
in hostel conversion projects
Chapter five has examined the Sethokga hostel conversion project and attempted to
unpack how the project has been conceptualised This chapter has identified and
outlined the main components of the project its main stakeholders and what has been
their role in the Sethokga hostel conversion project Discussed were the project phases a
number of critical elements such as how the project has understood the needs and
challenges of the hostel residents In addition to this chapter five outlined the way(s) in
which the residents have been involved in the project if the project considered anything
important in terms of gender issues and if what have these been factored into the
project By and large chapter five drew extensively on the findings of the fieldwork and
made an effort to narrate some of the insights and perspectives shared by the key
informants To conclude the chapter a collage of diagrams and images were presented
to offer the reader a visual narrative of the site of the family units
Page | 89
Concluding chapter
Chapter six concludes the study It presents a review and reflection of the study and
a summary of the aim and objectives It examines the limitations of the study and
lastly attempts to answer the question ldquoWhat does this mean for the urban and
regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo
61 Review and reflections
This research report consisted of six chapters chapter one introduced the study
chapter two provided the theoretical backdrop of the study chapter three
introduced the study area (Sethokga hostel) chapter four discussed the evolution of
hostel redevelopment conversion and what has been the states approach to hostel
conversion and chapter five examined the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel
conversion project
In chapter one the main point of discussion was the research question outlining the
aim and objectives of the study and the research methodology
Research question
How has the Sethokga hostel conversion to family units project been conceptualised
in how the project has been conceptualised does it address the stigma of hostel life
and it what way(s) does it do this
Sub-questions
What informed the decision to convert this particular hostel into family units
Conceptually what does the project entail what is the broad aim and vision
of the project what is the expected output and anticipated benefit of the
project
How has the project understood the needs and challenges of the residents
and in turn set to address those needs and challenges
In what way(s) have the residents of the hostel been involved in the project
What has been the experience of project implementation to date
Page | 90
In chapter one it was also argued that this particular aspect around the
conceptualisation of hostel conversion projects had somewhat been neglected and
not extensively researched Therefore that there needed to be more inquiry and
study conducted into the mechanisms implications and character of hostel
conversion projects
The studyrsquos theoretical backdrop was discussed in chapter two The aim of this was to
contextualise the term hostels as to clearly illustrate what is meant by it In addition
to drawing on particular strands of literature concepts ideas and arguments that
resonated with the study Chapter two argued that the historically the landscape of
hostels has by and large been complex at times perplexing and highly contentious
Chapter three introduced Sethokga hostel It elaborated on the locality of the hostel
and its local as well as municipal context A visual narrative of the hostel was also
provided and this captured the current state of the hostel and the conditions in which
its residents endure It was established that ironically the conditions in the hostel are
not much different to many of the living conditions in the inner city of Johannesburg
The hostel was badly designed poorly built and is suffering years of neglect it is in
appalling and overcrowded condition
Chapter four described the evolution of hostel redevelopment conversion in the
country and what has been the states approach to hostel conversion post-1994 This
chapter discussed in some detail the Hostel Redevelopment Programme and the
Community Residential Units Programme Arguing that these programmes have to
date been the lsquoforerunnersrsquo of the statersquos approach to addressing lsquothe hostel issuersquo
While in chapter five the conceptualisation of the Sethokga hostel conversion project
was examined Chapter five was the crux of this research report The discussions in the
chapters before it set up the groundwork for a critical exploration of the Sethokga
hostel conversion project and for unpacking the research question
Chapter six concludes this study and seeks to answer the question ldquoso what does this
mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for plannersrdquo Since this
report was conducted as part of the requirements for the partial fulfilment of an
Urban and Regional Planning honours qualification It is important to address the ldquoso
what for plannersrsquo question and the value that this report stands to offer to the
Page | 91
planning profession Firstly let us reflect on what have been some of the limitations of
the study
62 Limitations of the study
For the most part this study had a wealth of information and sources to draw from
The insights and wisdom provided by the key informants were invaluable their
willingness and enthusiasm to participate in this study was not something I had
anticipated but I remain truly grateful
Due to certain constraints more especially time constraints and the particular scope
focus of the research report this posed some limitations to the study In only
interviewing and engaging with officials and not with the residents of Sethokga the
voices opinions and views of the officials told only one side of a many-sided story
How the project affects and has affected the residents Is this something they want
support and for those who do not what are some of their reasons for contention Is
circular migration still as prominent a feature within the current context of Sethokga
What is the present-day nature of household configurations in the hostels (is the duty
of the older men still to order the actions of the younger men ie the cleaning and up
keeping of the communal area and other household duties) what for the residents
of Sethokga would constitute a successful project
Even as this study concludes the side of the hostel residents remains largely untold
and unreported Furthermore the supposed apathy on the part of the hostel residents
and the views expressed by the key informants that family units offer the most ideal
and best alternative to the residents of Sethokga could not be explored and
interrogated further given the limitations of the scope of the study
63 So what does this mean for the urban and regional planning profession and for
planners
Within contemporary South Africa there have certainly been a vast number of
conflicting views held regarding what should be the role and future of hostels
(Thurman 1997) Although academics policy makers bureaucrats developers and
the general public have usually been unable to reach longstanding middle-ground
on what should be done about hostels One of the more widely held views is that
hostels certainly present a real challenge but also an opportunity For government
Page | 92
developers non-government organisations (NGOs) built environment practitioners
and needless to say the residents of hostels themselves (Thurman 1997)
Planners are frequently cast in the role of performing a balancing act (Campbell
2006) As a result the adaptability of the planning profession as a coherent and
impartial discipline has over the years become rather topical subjects (Campbell
2006) This has inevitably continued to require new and innovative ways of lsquoseeingrsquo
lsquocomprehendingrsquo and lsquodoingrsquo things in order to shape and re-shape an inherently
divergent and historic-laden urban landscape (Jupp and Inch 2012) In the midst of
the shifts in the traditional conception and role of the planning profession as a merely
procedural and administrative activity (Harrison and Kahn 2002) planning is still to a
great extent closely tied to government structures (Cornwall 2002) Therefore within
this particular context of government driven intervention urban planning
professionals stand to be instrumental facilitators of development and offer essential
expertise and tools towards addressing some of the challenges within our urban
landscape (Albert and Kramsch 1999)
This study observed a range of intertwined urban dynamics ie around housing socio-
economic distress a wavering political climate and the need to be more
environmentally conscientious This necessitates focused attention and much
consideration as the political economic social and environmental junctures in which
planning has come to operate has meant that the profession has become
susceptible to external pressures scrutiny and influence (Campbell and Marshall
2002)
64 Conclusion
South Africa has for a number of years into democracy been at a critical time of
limited housing supply and a desperate need for housing (Khan and Thurman 2001)
(Pienaar
2010) Planners have an important role to play in facilitating coordinating and
effecting the reconfiguration of the urban landscape towards improving the setting
of inherently socio-economically ailing spaces such as hostels (Jupp and Inch 2012)
Hostels have largely remained as spaces that have continued to perpetuate
underdevelopment inequality and disempowerment (Khan and Thurman 2001) If
family units are to wholly address the stigma of hostel life and the convoluted nature
Page | 93
of hostels to alter the landscape of hostels and define a novel future for hostels and
their residents It is certain that this will require decisive action collaborative efforts
and the wisdom of retrospection
Page | 94
List of references
African National Congress 1994 The Reconstruction and Development Programme A
policy framework ANC Johannesburg
African National Congress (2003) Briefing note 5 Housing
httpwwwancorgzaelections2004briefingshousingpdf
Albert A and Kramsch O (1999) Space Inequality and Difference lsquoRadical Turns
and lsquoCultural Termsrdquo European Planning Studies 7(1) 77 ndash 79
Bandyopadhyay S and Green E (2008) Nation-building and Conflict in Modern
Africa The Suntory Centre
Barnett C (1999) Broadcasting the Rainbow Nation Media Democracy and Nation-
building in South Africa Editorial Board of Antipode 31 (3) 274-303
Benit-Gbaffou C and Mathoho M (2010) A case study of participation in the City
Deep Hostel Redevelopment Project Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Bonner P and Nieftagodien N (2012) Ekurhuleni the making of an urban region
Wits University Press
Campbell H and Marshall R (2002) Values and professional identities in planning
practice in Allmendinger R And Tewdwr-Jones M (eds) Planning futures new
directions for planning theory London Routledge
Castles S and M J (Millerl (2008) The Age of Migration International Population
Movements in the Modern World New York The Guilford Press
Charlton S et al (2014) From Housing to Human Settlement Evolving Perspectives
South African Cities Network
Chipkin I and Meny-Gibert S (2011) Why the Past matters Histories of the Public
Service in South Africa PARI Short Essays number 1 Johannesburg PARI
Collinson M A and K Adazu (2006) The INDEPTH Network A demographic resource
on migration and urbanisation in Africa and Asia Views on Migration in Sub-Saharan
Africa Proceedings of an African Migration Alliance Workshop C Cross D
Gelderblom N Roux and J Mafukidze Cape Town HSRC Press 159- 172
Page | 95
Collinson M A (2006) Health Impacts of Social Transition A study of Female
Temporary Migration and its impact on Child Mortality in Rural South Africa A
dissertation submitted to the School of Public Health University of the Witwatersrand
in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master in Science in the branch of
Medicine
Cornwall A (2002) Making Spaces Changing Places Situating Participation in
Development Institute of Development Studies IDS Working Paper 170
Creswell J W (2009) Research Design Qualitative Quantitative and Mixed Methods
Approaches 3rd Edition Los Angeles Sage Publications Inc
Demacon 2014 Sethokga hostels mixed typology market analysis market research
Findings and recommendations
Department of Human Settlements Republic of South Africa Programmes and
Subsidies document assessed on 7 July 2015 from
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentspublicationshuman_settlement
s_programmes_and_subsidiespdf
Department of Social Development Republic of South Africa White Paper on
Families in South Africa 2012
Dyiki M (2006) City of Cape Town Integrating Families Hostels to Homes
Redevelopment Programme Presentation
httpswwwwesterncapegovzatext200652006_hostels_presentation-_dyikipdf
Fritz V and Menocal A R (2007) Understanding State-Building from a Political
Economy Perspective An Analytical and Conceptual Paper on Processes
Embedded Tensions and Lessons for International Engagement Report for DFIDrsquos
Effective and Fragile States Teams Overseas Development Institute
Greenberg S and Mathoho M (2010) ldquoConceptual Framework on Public
Participation and Developmentrdquo Commissioned by Planact and funded by Ford
Foundation
Page | 96
Grieger L et al (2013) Moving Out and Moving In Evidence of Short-Term Household
Change in South Africa from the National Income Dynamics Study
Goldblatt B amp Meintjes S (1996) Gender and the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission a submission to the TRC May
Harrison P And Kahn M (2002) The ambiguities of change the case of the planning
profession in the province of KwaZulu-Natal South Africa in Thornley A and Rydin Y
(eds) Planning in the global era Aldershot Ashgate
Jupp E and Inch A (2012) Planning as a profession in uncertain times Town Planning
Review Vol 83 No 5
Khan F and Thurman S (2001) Setting the Stage Current Housing Policy and
Debate in South Africa Isandla Institute
Liefa Consulting (2015) Maps diagrams source
LTE Consulting December 2013 January 2014 Sethokga site Phase 1A supervisor
report
Mapetla M M (2005) Aspects of urban housing for women and men in Southern
Africa Roma Lesotho National University of Lesotho
Marshall M N (1996) Sampling for qualitative research Family Practice Oxford
University Press
Mosoetsa S (2011) Eating from one pot the dynamics of survival in poor South
African households Johannesburg Wits University Press
Mdunyelwa M L (2015) Public Participation in Hostel Redevelopment Programs in
Nyanga and Langa Dissertation presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in
the Faculty of Arts and Social Science at Stellenbosch University
National Housing Report (2009) -
httpwwwdhsgovzasitesdefaultfilesdocumentsnational_housing_20092_Techn
ical_General_Guidelines
Netshitenzhe J (2011) A Developmental State South Africarsquos developmental
Capacity UCT Summer School Mapungubwe Institute for Strategic Reflection
Page | 97
Peoples Housing Programme httpwwwjoburg-
archivecozacity_visionannualreport2002-03chapter10pdf
Pienaar J S and Cloete C E (2005) Hostel Conversion as Social Housing in South
Africa Funding Regime VS Real Needs Case Study of the Sethokga Hostel Conversion
Project Pacific Rim Real Estate Society (PRRES)
Pienaar J (2010) Community Residential Units key elements application implications
for Metros Municipal Leadership Housing Forum0
Policy Framework and Implementation Guidelines for the Community Residential Units
Programme 2006
httpwwwgovzaabout-governmentgovernment-programmescommunity-
residential-unit-cru-programme
Ramphele M (1993) A Bed Called Home Life in the Migrant Labour Hostels of Cape
Town Ohio Ohio University Press
Segal L (1991) The Human Face of Violence Hostel dwellers speak In The Journal of
Southern African Studies Vol 18 No 1
SJN Development Planning Consultants (2000) Oakmoor Area 19 Spatial
Development Framework
South African Department of Housing 2008 Community Residential Programme
httpwwwhousinggovzaContentCRUHomehtm
South African Local Government Association
httpwwwsalgaorgzaappwebrootassetsfilesGuidelines20for20Municipalities
Flyer20rental20housing20NMApdf
South African Yearbook 20122013
httpwwwsouthafricanewyorknetconsulateYearbook2020131320Human20S
ettlemp
Statistics South Africa Census (2001) Concepts and Definitions Report
httpswwwStatistics+South+Africa+Census+(2001)+Concepts+and+Definitions+Repo
rt+03-02-26+Version
Thurman S (1997) Umzamo improving hostel dwellersrsquo accommodation in South
Africa Environment and Urbanisation Vol 9 No 2
Page | 98
Urban Sector Network Final Report August 2000 ndash April 2003 Hostel Redevelopment
httppdfusaidgovpdf_docsPdaby792pdf
Van der Berg S (2010) Current poverty and income distribution in the context of
South African history Stellenbosch Economic Working Papers 2210
Von Holdt K (2010) Nationalism Bureaucracy and Developmental State The South
African Case South African Review of Sociology Volume 41 Number 1
Watt A (2012) Essentials of project management
httpopentextbccaprojectmanagement
Ziehl S C (2001) Documenting Changing Family Patterns in South Africa Are Census
Data of any Value African Sociological Review 5(2)
Interviews with key informants
Shibambo Vincent Resident Engineer LTE Consulting Interview 14thAugust 2015
(Sethokga family units project site)
Mthethwa Jabu Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Housing Officer Interview 17
August 2015 (Ekurhuleni Kempton Park Housing Offices)
Mohlapamaswi Ward Councillor ANC Tembisa Ward 4 Interview 18 August 2015
(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers
Sololo Lufefe Ward 4 Economic Development Representative Interview 18 August
2015(Sethokga hostel ward councillorsrsquo chambers)
Majikijela Sisa Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlements Sethokga
Hostel Conversion Project Manager Interview 19 August 2015 (Sethokga family units
project site boardroom)
Dyiki Malibongwe Housing Development Agency Official 7 September 2015
(Housing Development Agency head office Killarney Johannesburg)
Bako Simba Liefa Architects Interview 9 September (LTE House Sunninghill
Johannesburg)